Textile support was removed from jekyll core in #3319, and most of the
tests switched to markdown at that time. This changes the remaining
tests to use markdown as well. The vast majority of the test cases were
testing things in the file name or front matter, so it doesn't really
matter what markup format they use. The one test that was claiming to
test that textile was transformed had actually been moved to markdown as
well, just not renamed.
Fixes#3507
* davidized-collection_yaml_dots:
Move YAML Front Matter regexp into a constant.
Add support for collections documents to have YAML front matter ending in dots.
Conflicts:
test/test_collections.rb
* majioa-devel:
Ensure Post#excerpt_separator always returns a string.
get procedure for default excerpt separator for both cases site and page was moved to the post's specific method :excerpt_separator.
Added per post excerpt_separator functionality, so you are able to specify :excerpt_separator (as well as just :excerpt) key direct inside the post YAML, to make an excerpt based on the value in the post. Tests were also added.
specify :excerpt_separator (as well as just :excerpt) key direct inside
the post YAML, to make an excerpt based on the value in the post. Tests
were also added.
Document#destination wasn't unescaped properly.
For example, when we have a document named '_langs/c#.md',
we expect its url to be '/langs/c#.html',
but it was actually '/langs/c%23.html'.
We now unecape URL at Document#destination like Post#destination and
Page#destination.
The YAML spec permits blocks to end with three dots (...) in addition to
three dashes (---): http://www.yaml.org/spec/1.2/spec.html#id2760395. Some
programs that work with Jekyll (e.g., Pandoc) prefer the dots to dashes. This
commit permits the YAML metadata block to end with either dots or dashes. It
includes tests.
Signed-off-by: Parker Moore <parkrmoore@gmail.com>
Post#url wasn't escaped at all.
For example, when we have a page named 'a#b.html',
we expect its url to be 'a%23b.html',
but it was actually 'a#b.html'.
We now use Jekyll::URL.escape_path and Jekyll::URL.unescape_path.
Post#url was escaped using CGI.escape.
When file name contains a space character, its url points to
non-existing URL.
For example, when we have a post named '2014-01-02-foo bar.md',
we expect its url to be '/2014/01/02/foo%20bar.html',
but it was actually '/2014/01/02/foo+bar.html'.
We now define Jekyll::URL.escape_path and Jekyll::URL.unescape_path,
and use them to escape and unescape Post#url