Last modified 11 years ago Last modified on 2013-10-17 13:42:34

Wiki Processors

Processors are WikiMacros designed to provide alternative markup formats for the Wiki engine. Processors can be thought of as macro functions to process user-edited text.

Wiki processors can be used in any Wiki text throughout Trac, for various different purposes, like:

Using Processors

To use a processor on a block of text, first delimit the lines using a Wiki code block:

{{{
The lines
that should be processed...
}}}

Immediately after the {{{ or on the line just below, add #! followed by the processor name.

{{{
#!processorname
The lines
that should be processed...
}}}

This is the "shebang" notation, familiar to most UNIX users.

Besides their content, some Wiki processors can also accept parameters, which are then given as key=value pairs after the processor name, on the same line. If value has to contain space, as it's often the case for the style parameter, a quoted string can be used (key="value with space").

As some processors are meant to process Wiki markup, it's quite possible to nest processor blocks. You may want to indent the content of nested blocks for increased clarity, this extra indentation will be ignored when processing the content.

Examples

Wiki Markup Display

Example 1: Inserting raw HTML

{{{
#!html
<h1 style="color: grey">This is raw HTML</h1>
}}}

This is raw HTML

Example 2: Highlighted Python code in a <div> block with custom style

{{{#!div style="background: #ffd; border: 3px ridge"

This is an example of embedded "code" block:

  {{{
  #!python
  def hello():
      return "world"
  }}}

}}}

This is an example of embedded "code" block:

def hello():
    return "world"

Example 3: Searching tickets from a wiki page, by keywords.

{{{
#!html
<form action="/query" method="get"><div>
<input type="text" name="keywords" value="~" size="30"/>
<input type="submit" value="Search by Keywords"/>
<!-- To control what fields show up use hidden fields
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="id"/>
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="summary"/>
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="status"/>
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="milestone"/>
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="version"/>
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="owner"/>
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="priority"/>
<input type="hidden" name="col" value="component"/>
-->
</div></form>
}}}

Available Processors

The following processors are included in the Trac distribution:

#!default Present the text verbatim in a preformatted text block. This is the same as specifying no processor name (and no #!)
#!comment Do not process the text in this section (i.e. contents exist only in the plain text - not in the rendered page).
HTML related
#!html Insert custom HTML in a wiki page.
#!htmlcomment Insert an HTML comment in a wiki page (since 0.12).
Note that #!html blocks have to be self-contained, i.e. you can't start an HTML element in one block and close it later in a second block. Use the following processors for achieving a similar effect.
#!div Wrap an arbitrary Wiki content inside a <div> element (since 0.11).
#!span Wrap an arbitrary Wiki content inside a <span> element (since 0.11).
#!td Wrap an arbitrary Wiki content inside a <td> element (since 0.12)
#!th Wrap an arbitrary Wiki content inside a <th> element (since 0.12)
#!tr Can optionally be used for wrapping #!td and #!th blocks, either for specifying row attributes of better visual grouping (since 0.12)
See WikiHtml for example usage and more details about these processors.
Other Markups
#!rst Trac support for Restructured Text. See WikiRestructuredText.
#!textile Supported if Textile is installed. See a Textile reference.
Code Highlighting Support
#!c
#!cpp (C++)
#!python
#!perl
#!ruby
#!php
#!asp
#!java
#!js (Javascript)
#!sql
#!xml (XML or HTML)
#!sh (Bourne/Bash shell)
etc.
Trac includes processors to provide inline syntax highlighting for source code in various languages.

Trac relies on external software packages for syntax coloring, like Pygments.

See TracSyntaxColoring for information about which languages are supported and how to enable support for more languages.
MIME Type Processors
Using the MIME type as processor, it is possible to syntax-highlight the same languages that are supported when browsing source code.

Some examples:

{{{
#!text/html
<h1>text</h1>
}}}

The result will be syntax highlighted HTML code:

<h1>text</h1>

The same is valid for all other mime types supported.

{{{
#!diff
--- Version 55
+++ Version 56
@@ -115,8 +115,9 @@
     name='TracHelloWorld', version='1.0',
     packages=find_packages(exclude=['*.tests*']),
-    entry_points = """
-        [trac.plugins]
-        helloworld = myplugs.helloworld
-    """,
+    entry_points = {
+        'trac.plugins': [
+            'helloworld = myplugs.helloworld',
+        ],
+    },
 )
}}}

#!diff has a particularly nice renderer:

  • Version

     
    115115    name='TracHelloWorld', version='1.0', 
    116116    packages=find_packages(exclude=['*.tests*']), 
    117     entry_points = """ 
    118         [trac.plugins] 
    119         helloworld = myplugs.helloworld 
    120     """, 
     117    entry_points = { 
     118        'trac.plugins': [ 
     119            'helloworld = myplugs.helloworld', 
     120        ], 
     121    }, 
    121122) 

For more processor macros developed and/or contributed by users, visit:

Developing processors is no different from Wiki macros. In fact they work the same way, only the usage syntax differs. See WikiMacros#DevelopingCustomMacros for more information.


See also: WikiMacros, WikiHtml, WikiRestructuredText, TracSyntaxColoring, WikiFormatting, TracGuide