36 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
36 lines
2.2 KiB
Markdown
If you are using the sidebar plugin and have a header in the sidebar it shows up in the table of contents. I can see why this happens but it surprised me and wasn't the desired effect in my specific situation. -- [[AdamShand]]
|
|
|
|
A related side effect: If you use any sort of headers in the page
|
|
template (such as placing the page title in an `<h1>`), the toc plugin
|
|
picks it up. I suppose it parses the entire page rather than just the
|
|
rendered content. --[[JasonBlevins]]
|
|
|
|
> I fixed this in a patch to the toc module, see [[todo/allow_toc_to_skip_entries]]. -- [[anarcat]]
|
|
|
|
Why doesn't the TOC appear in the edit page preview? It only appears when the page is finally rendered. This makes it somewhat difficult to organize headings, saving & re-editing all the time. My user page currently has a toc to play with: --[[sabr]]
|
|
|
|
> Fixed. --[[Joey]]
|
|
|
|
Just ran into a side effect of `\[[!toc]]` being a NOP in pages
|
|
which are inlined: pages with `\[[!template id=note text="[[!toc]]"]]`
|
|
wound up having the note rendered in feeds as "Use this template
|
|
to insert a note into a page". Worked around this by making a local
|
|
copy of the template and removing its `<TMPL_UNLESS text>...</TMPL_UNLESS>`
|
|
section. Besides needing to generate guaranteed-unique anchor names,
|
|
are there other reasons this directive couldn't be made to work on
|
|
inlined pages? --[[schmonz]]
|
|
|
|
> Workaround: `\[[!template id=note text=" [[!toc]]"]]`
|
|
> (with whitespace) should work, because then Perl will consider
|
|
> the string to be a true value.
|
|
>
|
|
> Longer-term, my branch on [[bugs/template_creation_error]]
|
|
> aims to fix this sort of thing. --[[smcv]]
|
|
|
|
>> Workaround seems not to. Maybe whitespace is getting trimmed
|
|
>> along the way and it stays falsish. Interested in your branch;
|
|
>> sorry I can't offer precise feedback right now, but it looks sane
|
|
>> at a glance. --[[schmonz]]
|
|
|
|
How could this be tampered to make another plugin that would enable partial listing so I could make multiple "subTOCs" in the same page? For instance I'd have a `\[[!toc startlevel=1 levels=1]]` in the top of the page while after a level 1 heading I would have a `\[[!toc startlevel=2]]` with the level 2 and below headers limited by the ones below this particular level 1 header --[[iuri]]
|