27 | | Since 0.11, the filtering is done by Genshi, and as such, the produced out will be a well-formed fragment of HTML. In other words, this mean that you can no longer use two HTML blocks, one for opening a <div>, the second for closing it, in order to wrap arbitrary wiki text. |
28 | | To achieve this, you need now to use the ''div'' Wiki processor: |
| 27 | Since 0.11, the filtering is done by Genshi, and as such, the produced output will be a well-formed fragment of HTML. In other words, this mean that you can no longer use two HTML blocks, one for opening a <div>, the second for closing it, in order to wrap arbitrary wiki text. |
| 28 | The new way to wrap any wiki content inside a <div> is to use the ''div'' Wiki processor: |
| 54 | == HTML comments == |
| 55 | HTML comments are stripped from the output of the `html` processor. To add an HTML comment to a wiki page, use the `htmlcomment` processor (available since 0.12). For example, the following code block: |
| 56 | {{{ |
| 57 | {{{ |
| 58 | #!htmlcomment |
| 59 | This block is translated to an HTML comment. |
| 60 | It can contain <tags> and &entities; that will not be escaped in the output. |
| 61 | }}} |
| 62 | }}} |
| 63 | results in the following block in the HTML output: |
| 64 | {{{ |
| 65 | <!-- |
| 66 | This block is translated to an HTML comment. |
| 67 | It can contain <tags> and &entities; that will not be escaped in the output. |
| 68 | --> |
| 69 | }}} |
| 70 | Please note that the character sequence "--" is not allowed in HTML comments, and will generate a rendering error. |
| 71 | |
| 72 | |