2013-05-17 14:01:42 +02:00
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# Shortcodes: Flexible Content Embedding
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2013-02-04 21:27:22 +01:00
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2013-05-17 14:01:42 +02:00
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## Overview
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2013-02-04 21:27:22 +01:00
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2013-05-17 14:01:42 +02:00
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The `[api:ShortcodeParser]` API is simple parser that allows you to map specifically
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formatted content to a callback to transform them into something else.
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You might know this concept from forum software which don't allow you to insert
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direct HTML, instead resorting to a custom syntax.
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2013-05-17 14:01:42 +02:00
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In the CMS, authors often want to insert content elements which go beyond
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standard formatting, at an arbitrary position in their WYSIWYG editor.
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Shortcodes are a semi-technical solution for this. A good example would
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be embedding a 3D file viewer or a Google Map at a certain location.
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Here's some syntax variations:
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[my_shortcode]
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[my_shortcode /]
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[my_shortcode,myparameter="value"]
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[my_shortcode,myparameter="value"]Enclosed Content[/my_shortcode]
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2013-05-17 14:01:42 +02:00
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## Usage
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In its most basic form, you can invoke the `[api:ShortcodeParser]` directly:
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:::php
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ShortcodeParser::get_active()->parse($myvalue);
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2013-05-17 14:01:42 +02:00
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In addition, shortcodes are automatically parsed on any database field which is declared
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as `[api:HTMLValue]` or `[api:HTMLText]`, when rendered into a template.
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This means you can use shortcodes on common fields like `SiteTree.Content`,
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and any other `[api:DataObject::$db]` definitions of these types.
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In order to allow shortcodes in your own template placeholders,
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ensure they're casted correctly:
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:::php
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class MyObject extends DataObject {
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static $db = array('Content' => 'HTMLText');
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static $casting = array('ContentHighlighted' => 'HTMLText');
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public function ContentHighlighted($term) {
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return str_replace($term, "<em>$term</em>", $this->Content);
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}
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}
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There is currently no way to allow shortcodes directly in template markup
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(as opposed to return values of template placeholders).
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## Defining Custom Shortcodes
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All you need to do to define a shortcode is to register a callback with the parser that will be called whenever a
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shortcode is encountered. This callback will return a string to replace the shortcode with.
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If the shortcode is used for template placeholders of type `HTMLText` or `HTMLVarchar`,
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the returned value should be valid HTML
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To register a shortcode you call:
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ShortcodeParser::get('default')->register('my_shortcode', <callback>);
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These parameters are passed to the callback:
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- Any parameters attached to the shortcode as an associative array (keys are lower-case).
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- Any content enclosed within the shortcode (if it is an enclosing shortcode). Note that any content within this
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will not have been parsed, and can optionally be fed back into the parser.
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- The ShortcodeParser instance used to parse the content.
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- The shortcode tag name that was matched within the parsed content.
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## Example: Google Maps Iframe by Address
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To demonstrate how easy it is to build custom shortcodes, we'll build one to display
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a Google Map based on a provided address. Format:
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[googlemap,width=500,height=300]97-99 Courtenay Place, Wellington, New Zealand[/googlemap]
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So we've got the address as "content" of our new `googlemap` shortcode tags,
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plus some `width` and `height` arguments. We'll add defaults to those in our shortcode parser so they're optional.
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:::php
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ShortcodeParser::get('default')->register('googlemap', function($arguments, $address, $parser, $shortcode) {
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$iframeUrl = sprintf(
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'http://maps.google.com/maps?q=%s&hnear=%s&ie=UTF8&hq=&t=m&z=14&output=embed',
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urlencode($address),
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urlencode($address)
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);
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$width = (isset($args['width']) && $args['width']) ? $args['width'] : 400;
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$height = (isset($args['height']) && $args['height']) ? $args['height'] : 300;
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return sprintf(
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'<iframe width="%d" height="%d" src="%s" frameborder="0" scrolling="no" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0"></iframe>',
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$width,
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$height,
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$iframeUrl
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);
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});
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The hard bits are taken care of (parsing out the shortcodes), everything we need to do is a bit of string replacement.
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CMS users still need to remember the specific syntax, but these shortcodes can form the basis
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for more advanced editing interfaces (with visual placeholders). See the built-in `[embed]` shortcode as an example
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for coupling shortcodes with a form to create and edit placeholders.
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## Built-in Shortcodes
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SilverStripe comes with several shortcode parsers already.
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### Links
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Internal page links keep references to their database IDs rather than
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the URL, in order to make these links resilient against moving the target page to a different
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location in the page tree. This is done through the `[sitetree_link]` shortcode, which
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takes an `id` parameter. Example: `<a href="[sitetree_link,id=99]">`
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Links to internal `File` database records work exactly the same, but with the `[file_link]` shortcode.
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### Media (Photo, Video and Rich Content)
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Many media formats can be embedded into websites through the `<object>`
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tag, but some require plugins like Flash or special markup and attributes.
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OEmbed is a standard to discover these formats based on a simple URL,
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for example a Youtube link pasted into the "Insert Media" form of the CMS.
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Since TinyMCE can't represent all these varations, we're showing a placeholder
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instead, and storing the URL with a custom `[embed]` shortcode.
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Example: `.[embed width=480 height=270 class=left thumbnail=http://i1.ytimg.com/vi/lmWeD-vZAMY/hqdefault.jpg?r=8767]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lmWeD-vZAMY[/embed]`
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## Syntax
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* Unclosed - `[shortcode]`
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* Explicitly closed - `[shortcode/]`
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* With parameters, mixed quoting - `[shortcode parameter=value parameter2='value2' parameter3="value3"]`
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* Old style parameter separation - `[shortcode,parameter=value,parameter2='value2',parameter3="value3"]`
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* With contained content & closing tag - `[shortcode]Enclosed Content[/shortcode]`
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* Escaped (will output `[just] [text]` in response) - `[[just] [[text]]`
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### Attribute and element scope
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HTML with unprocessed shortcodes in it is still valid HTML. As a result, shortcodes can be in two places in HTML:
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- In an attribute value, like so: `<a title="[title]">link</a>`
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- In an element's text, like so: `<p>Some text [shortcode] more text</p>`
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The first is called "element scope" use, the second "attribute scope"
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You may not use shortcodes in any other location. Specifically, you can not use shortcodes to generate attributes or
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change the name of a tag. These usages are forbidden:
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<[paragraph]>Some test</[paragraph]>
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<a [titleattribute]>link</a>
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You may need to escape text inside attributes `>` becomes `>`,
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You can include HTML tags inside a shortcode tag, but you need to be careful of nesting to ensure you don't
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break the output
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Good:
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<div>
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[shortcode]
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<p>Caption</p>
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[/shortcode]
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</div>
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Bad:
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<div>
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[shortcode]
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</div>
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<p>
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[/shortcode]
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</p>
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### Location
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Element scoped shortcodes have a special ability to move the location they are inserted at to comply with
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HTML lexical rules. Take for example this basic paragraph tag:
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<p><a href="#">Head [figure,src="assets/a.jpg",caption="caption"] Tail</a></p>
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When converted naively would become
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<p><a href="#">Head <figure><img src="assets/a.jpg" /><figcaption>caption</figcaption></figure> Tail</a></p>
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However this is not valid HTML - P elements can not contain other block level elements.
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To fix this you can specify a "location" attribute on a shortcode. When the location attribute is "left" or "right"
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the inserted content will be moved to immediately before the block tag. The result is this:
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<figure><img src="assets/a.jpg" /><figcaption>caption</figcaption></figure><p><a href="#">Head Tail</a></p>
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When the location attribute is "leftAlone" or "center" then the DOM is split around the element. The result is this:
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<p><a href="#">Head </a></p><figure><img src="assets/a.jpg" /><figcaption>caption</figcaption></figure><p><a href="#"> Tail</a></p>
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### Parameter values
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Here is a summary of the callback parameter values based on some example shortcodes.
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Short
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[my_shortcodes]
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$attributes => array()
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$enclosedContent => null
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$parser => ShortcodeParser instance
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$tagName => 'my_shortcode'
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Short with attributes
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[my_shortcode,attribute="foo",other="bar"]
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$attributes => array ('attribute' => 'foo', 'other' => 'bar')
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$enclosedContent => null
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$parser => ShortcodeParser instance
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$tagName => 'my_shortcode'
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Long with attributes
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[my_shortcode,attribute="foo"]content[/my_shortcode]
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$attributes => array('attribute' => 'foo')
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$enclosedContent => 'content'
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$parser => ShortcodeParser instance
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$tagName => 'my_shortcode'
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## Limitations
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Since the shortcode parser is based on a simple regular expression it cannot properly handle nested shortcodes. For
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example the below code will not work as expected:
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[shortcode]
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[shortcode][/shortcode]
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[/shortcode]
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The parser will raise an error if it can not find a matching opening tag for any particular closing tag
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## Related
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* [Wordpress implementation](http://codex.wordpress.org/Shortcode_API)
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