@indiscale/ckeditor5-complexitywiki-plugins
v0.0.3
Published
CaosDB's wiki plugins for CKEditor 5.
Downloads
3
Readme
@indiscale/ckeditor5-complexitywiki-plugins
This plugin troduces three buttons that insert specific syntax used for CaosDB's wiki app into the editor field:
- An
inlineMathButton
which inserts the delimiters for inline MathJax at the position of the cursor. - A
displayMathButton
which inserts the delimiters for display MathJax at the position of the cursor. - An
inlineReferenceButton
which inserts a template for an inline reference to another CaosDB entity or one of its properties at the position of the cursor.
This package was created by the ckeditor5-package-generator package.
Table of contents
Developing the package
To develop this package, edit the code in the src
directory. You can use the
npm run start
script to test your changes directly with the editor
defined in sample/ckeditor.js
. To actually test it together with CaosDB's web
interface, the following steps have to be followed:
npm pack
this repository and install it in theckeditor5-build-classic
package of our CKeditor 5 fork.- Test and build the package as described in that repo's
README_INDISCALE.md
. - Zip and copy the build files to
caosdb-webui/libs
- Start a CaosDB server with that version of the webinterface and test the editor in the edit mode
Only after successful tests and a code review of your changes in this
repository, merge your development branch and publish the new version of this
repo on npm with npm publish
. Then it can be included in our custom build of
CKEditor which then can subsequently be used in the upstream repo of the
caosdb-webui.
To read about the CKEditor 5 framework, visit the CKEditor5 documentation.
Available scripts
Npm scripts are a convenient way to provide commands in a project. They are defined in the package.json
file and shared with other people contributing to the project. It ensures that developers use the same command with the same options (flags).
All the scripts can be executed by running npm run <script>
. Pre and post commands with matching names will be run for those as well.
The following scripts are available in the package.
start
Starts a HTTP server with the live-reload mechanism that allows previewing and testing plugins available in the package.
When the server has been started, the default browser will open the developer sample. This can be disabled by passing the --no-open
option to that command.
You can also define the language that will translate the created editor by specifying the --language [LANG]
option. It defaults to 'en'
.
Examples:
# Starts the server and open the browser.
npm run start
# Disable auto-opening the browser.
npm run start -- --no-open
# Create the editor with the interface in German.
npm run start -- --language=de
test
Allows executing unit tests for the package, specified in the tests/
directory. The command accepts the following modifiers:
--coverage
– to create the code coverage report,--watch
– to observe the source files (the command does not end after executing tests),--source-map
– to generate source maps of sources,--verbose
– to print additional webpack logs.
Examples:
# Execute tests.
npm run test
# Generate code coverage report after each change in the sources.
npm run test -- --coverage --test
lint
Runs ESLint, which analyzes the code (all *.js
files) to quickly find problems.
Examples:
# Execute eslint.
npm run lint
lint-fix
Like the above lint
but runs ESLint with the --fix
option which
fixes a lot of formatting issues automatically.
Examples:
# Execute eslint with --fix option
npm run lint-fix
stylelint
Similar to the lint
task, stylelint analyzes the CSS code (*.css
files in the theme/
directory) in the package.
Examples:
# Execute stylelint.
npm run stylelint
dll:build
Creates a DLL-compatible package build which can be loaded into an editor using DLL builds.
Examples:
# Build the DLL file that is ready to publish.
npm run dll:build
# Build the DLL file and listen to changes in its sources.
npm run dll:build -- --watch
dll:serve
Creates a simple HTTP server (without the live-reload mechanism) that allows verifying whether the DLL build of the package is compatible with the CKEditor 5 DLL builds.
Examples:
# Starts the HTTP server and opens the browser.
npm run dll:serve
translations:collect
Collects translation messages (arguments of the t()
function) and context files, then validates whether the provided values do not interfere with the values specified in the @ckeditor/ckeditor5-core
package.
The task may end with an error if one of the following conditions is met:
- Found the
Unused context
error – entries specified in thelang/contexts.json
file are not used in source files. They should be removed. - Found the
Context is duplicated for the id
error – some of the entries are duplicated. Consider removing them from thelang/contexts.json
file, or rewrite them. - Found the
Context for the message id is missing
error – entries specified in source files are not described in thelang/contexts.json
file. They should be added.
Examples:
npm run translations:collect
translations:download
Download translations from the Transifex server. Depending on users' activity in the project, it creates translations files used for building the editor.
The task requires passing the URL to Transifex API. Usually, it matches the following format: https://www.transifex.com/api/2/project/[PROJECT_SLUG]
.
To avoid passing the --transifex
option every time when calls the command, you can store it in package.json
, next to the ckeditor5-package-tools translations:download
command.
Examples:
npm run translations:download -- --transifex [API URL]
translations:upload
Uploads translation messages onto the Transifex server. It allows for the creation of translations into other languages by users using the Transifex platform.
The task requires passing the URL to the Transifex API. Usually, it matches the following format: https://www.transifex.com/api/2/project/[PROJECT_SLUG]
.
To avoid passing the --transifex
option every time when you call the command, you can store it in package.json
, next to the ckeditor5-package-tools translations:upload
command.
Examples:
npm run translations:upload -- --transifex [API URL]
License
The @indiscale/ckeditor5-complexitywiki-plugins
package is available under MIT license.
However, it is the default license of packages created by the ckeditor5-package-generator package and it can be changed.