Ah, I see.. I've used RedCloth and textile-editor-helper for this. We did use TinyMCE in the past and it was a pain.
I've cleaned up the textile-editor-helper plugin and put the code up on github: http://github.com/felttippin/textile-editor-helper/tree/master I've also heard good things about this one: http://github.com/pelargir/textile_toolbar/tree/master Ryan On Oct 31, 2008, at 4:35 PM, Ken wrote: Hi Ryan, Thanks for the response. In this particular situation I don't think the syntaxhighlighter will help because nobody will be posting code snippets on this blog (it's part of an application that's not for developers). I'm not familiar with the white list plugin so I'll check it out. Thanks, Ken On Oct 31, 2:21 pm, Ryan Felton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Assuming you're not using wordpress as your blogging > engine:http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-syntax/screenshots/ > > I'd say check out the libraryhttp://code.google.com/p/syntaxhighlighter/ > . > > I've used the white list > pluginhttp://svn.techno-weenie.net/projects/plugins/white_list/ > and added table, th, tr, and td tags to it. > > Ryan > > On Oct 31, 2008, at 4:07 PM, Ken Hudson wrote: > > Hi All, > > I'm working on a new application that will need a blog. The basics > for creating a blog are well documented all over the web and are > pretty easy and straightforward. However, most of what you find is > very simplistic - blog entries and comments just consisting of simple > text, for example. In my application, I will need to allow blog posts > to have at least some HTML markup (e.g., links, unordered lists, and > in particular images). The same goes for blog comments. Does anyone > have any suggestions on how to go about doing this? RedCloth would > appear to be one alternative but my users aren't going to know Textile > and there's no way I can expect them to learn it. I need to balance > my requirements with a healthy concern for cross site scripting (XSS) > and I'm unsure how to proceed. I'm very curious how sites > likehttp://www.rubyinside.com > accomplish this. I would greatly appreciate any advice! > > Thanks, Ken --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ SD Ruby mailing list [email protected] http://groups.google.com/group/sdruby -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
