I discovered that I have to use the full path to
reference a page.
For example *How To/Add an Action* because How to is a folder.
Let us that we should be really careful can be really disruptive as my
experience showed it.
No you don't have. I tried to keep the syntax as close as possible to
SWiki. To reference a page in the same folder you simply have to give
the title and should work perfectly.
See the comments of the message Structure>>resolveTo: to understand how
the full resolving process is working or have a look at the tests:
"Start the resolving-process at the receiver with the
resolving-algorithm depending
on the count of identifiers in aPathString:
1. if the first character of the path is a seperator
- the lookup is started in the root-node and processed downwards
2. if the first character is not a seperator and ...
2.1 an empty path is given
- the receiver is returned
2.1 a path with one or more entries is given
- a lookup is started in the parent of the receiver
The first matching structure is returned or nil if no appropriate item
could be located
in the tree."
Now what is the semantics of remove?
if I point to a page A from page B
then A got removed from a folder C
do I still see the page B I hope.
Yes sure! If A is a page or a resource nothing else will be removed. If
A is a folder then all its children will also be removed.
I think that remove is not a good name (is it remove
the link or
delete the page).
We might change that easily.
Then what is the password to remove page?
See my previous e-mail.
Finally we see quickly that we will need move page
from there to there
because I wanted to reorganise the page alex did and I put the mess.
That is currently not possible from the web, only very basic stuff is
supported. But I think there is a project for the ST lecutre to create
a powerfull management interface allowing move-, copy-, ... operations
like you have in Explorer (Windows), Finder (OS X) or Midnight
Commander (Unix).
Of course you might easily that from transcript using the inspector ;-)
--
Lukas Renggli
http://renggli.freezope.org