46 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext
46 lines
1.3 KiB
Plaintext
/*!
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\page tidy_config Configuration
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Configuration settings and files
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\tableofcontents
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To get a list of all configuration settings, see \ref config_options below or use:
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\code{.sh}
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tidy -help-config
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\endcode
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\section using_config Using a configuration file
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The most convenient way to configure Tidy is by using separate configuration file.
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Assuming you have created a Tidy configuration file named `myconfig.txt` (the name and extension don’t matter), you can instruct Tidy to use it via the
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command line option `-config myconfig.txt` for example:
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\code {.sh}
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tidy -config myconfig.txt file1.html file2.html
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\endcode
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Alternatively, you can name the default config file via the environment
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variable named `HTML_TIDY`, the value of which is the absolute path for the config file.
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You can also set config options on the command line by preceding the name of the option
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immediately (no intervening space) with the string “--”; for example:
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\code {.sh}
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tidy --break-before-br true --show-warnings false
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\endcode
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You can find documentation for full set of configuration options on the \ref quickref page.
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\section example_config Example Configuration File
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\include example_config.txt
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\section config_options Config Options
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<pre>
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\htmlinclude tidy5.config.txt
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</pre>
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*/ |