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https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-framework
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Conflicts: dev/CsvBulkLoader.php
283 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
283 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
# Rich-Text Editing (WYSIWYG)
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## Introduction
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Editing and formatting content is the bread and butter of every content management system,
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which is why SilverStripe has a tight integration with our preferred editor library, [TinyMCE](http://tinymce.com).
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On top of the base functionality, we use our own insertion dialogs to ensure
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you can effectively select and upload files. In addition to the markup managed by TinyMCE,
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we use [shortcodes](/reference/shortcodes) to store information about inserted
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images or media elements.
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## Usage
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The framework comes with a `[api:HTMLEditorField]` form field class which encapsulates most of the required
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functionality. It is usually added through the `[api:DataObject->getCMSFields()]` method:
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:::php
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class MyObject extends DataObject {
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private static $db = array('Content' => 'HTMLText');
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public function getCMSFields() {
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return new FieldList(new HTMLEditorField('Content'));
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}
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}
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## Configuration
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To keep the JavaScript editor configuration manageable and extensible,
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we've wrapped it in a PHP class called `[api:HtmlEditorConfig]`.
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The class comes with its own defaults, which are extended through [configuration files](/topics/configuration)
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in the framework (and the `cms` module in case you've got that installed).
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There can be multiple configs, which should always be created / accessed using `[api:HtmlEditorConfig::get]`.
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You can then set the currently active config using `set_active()`.
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By default, a config named 'cms' is used in any field created throughout the CMS interface.
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<div class="notice" markdown='1'>
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Caveat: currently the order in which the `_config.php` files are executed depends on the module directory
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names. Execution order is alphabetical, so if you set a TinyMCE option in the `aardvark/_config.php`, this
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will be overriden in `framework/admin/_config.php` and your modification will disappear.
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This is a general problem with `_config.php` files - it may be fixed in the future by making it possible to
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configure the TinyMCE with the new [configuration system](../topics/configuration).
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</div>
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### Adding and removing capabilities
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In its simplest form, the configuration of the editor includes adding and removing buttons and plugins.
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You can add plugins to the editor using the Framework's `[api:HtmlEditorConfig::enablePlugins]` method. This will
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transparently generate the relevant underlying TinyMCE code.
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:::php
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// File: mysite/_config.php
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->enablePlugins('media');
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Note: this utilises the TinyMCE's `PluginManager::load` function under the hood (check the
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[TinyMCE documentation on plugin
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loading](http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/API3:method.tinymce.AddOnManager.load) for details).
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Plugins and advanced themes can provide additional buttons that can be added (or removed) through the
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configuration. Here is an example of adding a `ssmacron` button after the `charmap` button:
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:::php
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// File: mysite/_config.php
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->insertButtonsAfter('charmap', 'ssmacron');
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Buttons can also be removed:
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:::php
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// File: mysite/_config.php
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->removeButtons('tablecontrols', 'blockquote', 'hr');
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Note: internally `[api:HtmlEditorConfig]` uses the TinyMCE's `theme_advanced_buttons` option to configure these. See
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the [TinyMCE documentation of this option](http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Configuration:theme_advanced_buttons_1_n)
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for more details.
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### Setting options
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TinyMCE behaviour can be affected through its [configuration options](http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Configuration).
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These options will be passed straight to the editor.
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One example of the usage of this capability is to redefine the TinyMCE's [whitelist of HTML
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tags](http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Configuration:extended_valid_elements) - the tags that will not be stripped
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from the HTML source by the editor.
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:::php
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// Add start and type attributes for <ol>, add <object> and <embed> with all attributes.
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->setOption(
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'extended_valid_elements',
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'img[class|src|alt|title|hspace|vspace|width|height|align|onmouseover|onmouseout|name|usemap],' .
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'iframe[src|name|width|height|title|align|allowfullscreen|frameborder|marginwidth|marginheight|scrolling],' .
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'object[classid|codebase|width|height|data|type],' .
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'embed[src|type|pluginspage|width|height|autoplay],' .
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'param[name|value],' .
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'map[class|name|id],' .
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'area[shape|coords|href|target|alt],' .
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'ol[start|type]'
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);
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Note: the default setting for the CMS's `extended_valid_elements` we are overriding here can be found in
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`framework/admin/_config.php`.
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### Writing custom plugins
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It is also possible to add custom buttons to TinyMCE. A simple example of this is SilverStripe's `ssmacron`
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plugin. The source can be found in the Framework's `thirdparty/tinymce_ssmacron` directory.
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Here is how we can create a project-specific plugin. Create a `mysite/javascript/myplugin` directory,
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add the plugin button icon - here `myplugin.png` - and the source code - here `editor_plugin.js`. Here is a very
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simple example of a plugin that adds a button to the editor:
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:::js
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(function() {
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tinymce.create('tinymce.plugins.myplugin', {
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init : function(ed, url) {
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var self = this;
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ed.addButton ('myplugin', {
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'title' : 'My plugin',
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'image' : url+'/myplugin.png',
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'onclick' : function () {
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alert('Congratulations! Your plugin works!');
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}
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});
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},
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getInfo : function() {
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return {
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longname : 'myplugin',
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author : 'Me',
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authorurl : 'http://me.org.nz/',
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infourl : 'http://me.org.nz/myplugin/',
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version : "1.0"
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};
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}
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});
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tinymce.PluginManager.add('myplugin', tinymce.plugins.myplugin);
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})();
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You can then enable this plugin through the `[api:HtmlEditorConfig::enablePlugins]`:
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:::php
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->enablePlugins(array('myplugin' => '../../../mysite/javascript/myplugin/editor_plugin.js'));
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For more complex examples see the [Creating a Plugin](http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Creating_a_plugin) in TinyMCE
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documentation, or browse through plugins that come with the Framework at `thirdparty/tinymce/plugins`.
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## Image and Media Insertion
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The `[api:HtmlEditorField]` API also handles inserting images and media
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files into the managed HTML content. It can be used both for referencing
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files on the webserver filesystem (through the `[api:File]` and `[api:Image]` APIs),
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as well as hotlinking files from the web.
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We use [shortcodes](/reference/shortcodes) to store information about inserted images or media elements.
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The `[api:ShortcodeParser]` API post-processes the HTML content on rendering,
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and replaces the shortcodes accordingly. It also takes care of care of placing the
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shortcode replacements relative to its surrounding markup (e.g. left/right alignment).
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## oEmbed: Embedding media through external services
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The ["oEmbed" standard](http://www.oembed.com/) is implemented by many media services
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around the web, allowing easy representation of files just by referencing a website URL.
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For example, a content author can insert a playable youtube video just by knowing
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its URL, as opposed to dealing with manual HTML code.
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oEmbed powers the "Insert from web" feature available through `[api:HtmlEditorField]`.
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Internally, it makes HTTP queries to a list of external services
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if it finds a matching URL. These services are described in the `Oembed.providers` configuration.
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Since these requests are performed on page rendering, they typically have a long cache time (multiple days). To refresh
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a cache, append `?flush=1` to a URL.
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To disable oEmbed usage, set the `Oembed.enabled` configuration property to "false".
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### Doctypes
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Since TinyMCE generates markup, it needs to know which doctype your documents
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will be rendered in. You can set this through the [element_format](http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Configuration:element_format) configuration variable. It defaults to the stricter 'xhtml'
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setting, for example rendering self closing tags like `<br/>` instead of `<br>`.
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In case you want to adhere to HTML4 instead, use the following configuration:
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:::php
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->setOption('element_format', 'html');
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By default, TinyMCE and SilverStripe will generate valid HTML5 markup,
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but it will strip out HTML5 tags like `<article>` or `<figure>`.
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If you plan to use those, add them to the [valid_elements](http://www.tinymce.com/wiki.php/Configuration:valid_elements)
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configuration setting.
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Also, the `[api:SS_HTMLValue]` API underpinning the HTML processing parses the markup
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into a temporary object tree which can be traversed and modified before saving.
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The built-in parser only supports HTML4 and XHTML syntax. In order to successfully
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process HTML5 tags, please use the
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['silverstripe/html5' module](https://github.com/silverstripe/silverstripe-html5).
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## Recipes
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### Customizing the "Insert" panels
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In the standard installation, you can insert links (internal/external/anchor/email),
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images as well as flash media files. The forms used for preparing the new content element
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are rendered by SilverStripe, but there's some JavaScript involved to transfer
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back and forth between a content representation the editor can understand, present and save.
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Example: Remove field for "image captions"
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:::php
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// File: mysite/code/MyToolbarExtension.php
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class MyToolbarExtension extends Extension {
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public function updateFieldsForImage(&$fields, $url, $file) {
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$fields->removeByName('Caption');
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}
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}
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:::php
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// File: mysite/_config.php
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HtmlEditorField_Toolbar::add_extension('MyToolbarExtension');
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Adding functionality is a bit more advanced, you'll most likely
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need to add some fields to the PHP forms, as well as write some
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JavaScript to ensure the values from those fields make it into the content
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elements (and back out in case an existing element gets edited).
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There's lots of extension points in the `[api:HtmlEditorField_Toolbar]` class
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to get you started.
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### Security groups with their own editor configuration
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Different groups of authors can be assigned their own config,
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e.g. a more restricted rule set for content reviewers (see the "Security" )
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The config is available on each user record through `[api:Member->getHtmlEditorConfigForCMS()]`.
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The group assignment is done through the "Security" interface for each `[api:Group]` record.
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Note: The dropdown is only available if more than one config exists.
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### Using the editor outside of the CMS
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Each interface can have multiple fields of this type, each with their own toolbar to set formatting
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and insert HTML elements. They do share one common set of dialogs for inserting links and other media though,
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encapsulated in the `[api:HtmlEditorField_Toolbar]` class.
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In the CMS, those dialogs are automatically instanciated, but in your own interfaces outside
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of the CMS you have to take care of instanciation yourself:
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:::php
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// File: mysite/code/MyController.php
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class MyObjectController extends Controller {
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public function EditorToolbar() {
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return HtmlEditorField_Toolbar::create($this, "EditorToolbar");
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}
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}
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:::ss
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// File: mysite/templates/MyController.ss
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$Form
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<% with $EditorToolbar %>
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$MediaForm
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$LinkForm
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<% end_with %>
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Note: The dialogs rely on CMS-access, e.g. for uploading and browsing files,
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so this is considered advanced usage of the field.
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:::php
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// File: mysite/_config.php
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->disablePlugins('ssbuttons');
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->removeButtons('sslink', 'ssmedia');
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HtmlEditorConfig::get('cms')->addButtonsToLine(2, 'link', 'media');
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### Developing a wrapper to use a different WYSIWYG editors with HTMLEditorField
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WYSIWYG editors are complex beasts, so replacing it completely is a difficult task.
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The framework provides a wrapper implementation for the basic required functionality,
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mainly around selecting and inserting content into the editor view.
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Have a look in `HtmlEditorField.js` and the `ss.editorWrapper` object to get you started
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on your own editor wrapper. Note that the `[api:HtmlEditorConfig]` is currently hardwired to support TinyMCE,
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so its up to you to either convert existing configuration as applicable,
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or start your own configuration.
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## Related
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* [Howto: Extend the CMS Interface](../howto/extend-cms-interface)
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