Linguist: Yes, it’s intended that you use it inside the entry. It’s parsed by the plugin during the template rendering phase, not as an EE tag, but as something that this plugin is specifically looking for.
Mats: Glad you like it Mats. I generally do submit my plugins to our official repository, but only after they’ve been in the wild for awhile so I have time to fix any unanticipated bugs or add any features that might reveal their need.
Ask and ye shall receive. Introducing: Feetnotes 1.0. I threw the docs together really quickly tonight. And for that matter I threw the plugin together pretty quickly, too. Give it a whirl and let me know how it works for you. Feel free to peek under the hood; there is some configurable stuff in there.
Not everything is sunshine. As a matter of fact, I do have a slight problem with this plugin, and I think… if I have this problem, probably many more will encounter it too. So how to deal with it?
It concerns the use of the Unicode entity ↩ and MSIE (sigh). In Firefox ↩ it displays as it should do, as an old-fashioned electrical typewriter carriage return arrow. But in IE it displays by default one of these small can’t-display-this-character boxes (see example here – and in this very post if you are using IE6 and older!).
I tried to do some research on how to show Unicode entities in IE, but I can’t say it made me much wiser. How do you circumvent this rather annoying problem (other than boycotting IE6 and older browsers… [I think IE7 will solve this problem])? You don’t want to revert to a simple text link (“Back”) if you can help it, do you?
Mats
Have you read the original article by Johne Gruber / Daring Fireball, whose work these plugins are based upon? Let me quote:
Of course, because it’s a Unicode character, the design assumes you’ve got a Unicode-savvy web browser and Unicode-savvy fonts installed on your system. Some users of pre-XP versions of Windows may just see a box instead of a hooked arrow. My heart bleeds.
If it’s really bothering you, you can always use some other character, like « or similar.
Have you read the original article by Johne Gruber / Daring Fireball, whose work these plugins are based upon? Let me quote:Of course, because it’s a Unicode character, the design assumes you’ve got a Unicode-savvy web browser and Unicode-savvy fonts installed on your system. Some users of pre-XP versions of Windows may just see a box instead of a hooked arrow. My heart bleeds.
Yes, I skimmed through John Gruber’s article, but I didn’t notice this quote since it was placed in a… footnote. 😛
If it’s really bothering you, you can always use some other character, like « or similar.
Of course you can, but my question was really, Is there another better way to solve this problem than to revert to this method? And as far as I can tell from what I’ve read about this, it isn’t so much a problem of “pre-XP versions of Windows” (I run XP but use IE for test purposes) as it is a problem of what browser you use (pre-IE7) in combination with what fonts are defined in you site’s CSS. Am I wrong?
Mats
As per usual, I love your naming conventions, Brent.
Thanks! You should see some of the others I’ve got behind the scenes.
It concerns the use of the Unicode entity ↩ and MSIE (*sigh*).
Just as soon as I can get onto my main computer I will make the ↩ user-configurable. I meant to do that originally. My bad. That’s what I get for not testing in IE.
Other than that, has anybody tried Feetnotes? Is it working? I’ve only used it in a testing environment, so if anybody puts it into a live site I’d love to see it.
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