Hi,
I´ve applied the path on trunk 259 and it worked very well! Thanks! Just two points:
tinymce?
Thank you all! Krishna
2006/6/2, Chris Fordham chris@xhost.com.au:
I do not know why it doesn't work in v8.0, do they know why - whether it is the UA or the code? It is fair enough that it works in v9, however v9 is not even released yet. When v9 comes out most Opera users will upgrade, so it doesn't really matter. So I guess its really not an issue as Opera v9 will go into production eventually soon.
On Fri, 02 Jun 2006 23:41:32 +1000, Eric Stadtherr estadtherr@gmail.com wrote:
Do you think Opera8 incompatibility is a show-stopper for this feature? If you peruse the forums at the TinyMCE web site, the developers seem pretty responsive to fixing browser issues as long as they're not working around behaviors that are obvious browser bugs.
On Fri, 02 Jun 2006 21:52:46 +1000, "Chris Fordham" wrote:
In Opera v8.x it just doesn't seem to load the plugin. see attachement.
I just tested v9b on Win32 and yeah it seems fine.
On Fri, 02 Jun 2006 00:30:17 +1000, Eric Stadtherr <estadtherr@gmail.com
wrote:
Chris,
Here is a URL with some of the compatibility information about TinyMCE:
http://tinymce.moxiecode.com/tinymce/docs/compatiblity_chart.html
I have done 90% of my work on Firefox/MacOS10.4, with some
Firefox/Linux
and Safari/MacOS10.4 testing as well. Safari doesn't work great, but I have heard some things about Safari's JavaScript interpreter that point to Safari as the source of the problem.
TinyMCE has a lot of fancy plugins - in fact, you can make it work pretty much like M$ Word if you configure it correctly. I believe the plugins that are "MSIE only" are some of the "fluff" plugins (like the "iespell" spell
checker,
the graphics object z-layering, etc.). All of the more "normal" HTML-based formatting plugins (styles, fonts, colors, links, images, etc.) have worked fine on Firefox.
What happened when you tried to use Opera with their example page?
-Eric
On Thu, 01 Jun 2006 16:58:43 +1000, "Chris Fordham" wrote:
I went to the TinyMCE site to check out the examples. It didn't seem to load in my Opera on both Linux and Windows at all.
In addition i found this on the site:
"This page shows all available plugins that are included in the TinyMCE distribution. Some of these plugins will only be visible on MSIE due to the lack of some support in FF. For more details on the various options on TinyMCE check the manual or for more third party plugins check the plugin section."
I am just thinking if this plugin is extensible enough to deply with
RC?
IMHO everything should work in Opera, MSIE and Firefox without exceptions (or at least without major exceptions).
Am I missing something here? I really would like to see the WYSIWYG
work
in Opera.
Chris
On Thu, 01 Jun 2006 01:49:12 +1000, Eric Stadtherr estadtherr@gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
I have been working on integrating the TinyMCE WYSIWYG HTML editor
into
RoundCube to be able to compose HTML messages. I posted a description and some screen shots in the forums a little while ago:
URL: http://www.roundcubeforum.net/index.php?topic=177.0
Topic: HTML / Wyswig Editor for sending mail ?
I recently merged my code into the latest revision of the SubVersion trunk (r254), so the patch should go smoothly with any recently obtained working copy. The patch requires downloading and installing the TinyMCE package from http://tinymce.moxiecode.com at the same level as RoundCube in your web server document folder hierarchy. I made the patch available for download here:
http://stadtherr.bounceme.net/files/tinymce_rev254.patch
The patch contains a couple other minor changes that I can separate
out
if necessary:
fixed variable name typos in main.inc
fix to url_chars in func.inc (it used to split URLs on ";" characters)
I've tested it with forwarding various commercial HTML messages, and composing/replying to my own messages. The editor itself supports a large number of HTML features, but a subset of those features can be made available by initializing the editor differently in the JavaScript code (see the "tinyMCE.init()" call in compose.inc, and the TinyMCE documentation for details).
I'd like to add a checkbox/toggle in the compose window to allow users to choose between HTML/plain-text when composing a message - that's next on my list.
Take a look and let me know what you think, and if it sounds like something that should go into the baseline.
Thanks for all the great work! I chose RoundCube after trying out 5 or 6 other WebMail applications. Some others had more features, but the RoundCube user interface made all the difference!
-Eric Stadtherr
-- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/
-- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/
-- Using Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/mail/