* maybe_slugify() only does simple sanitation if config.slugify is false
* slugify is disabled by default, turn on for backwards-compatibility
* First docs changes for optional slugification
* Remove # from slugs but not &
* Add/fix tests for utf8 slugs
* Fix test sites for i18n slugs
* fix templates tests for i18n slugs
* Rename slugify setting to slugify_paths
* Default slugify_paths
* Update documentation for slugify_paths
* quasi_slugify removes ?, /, # and newlines
* Remove forbidden NTFS chars in quasi_slugify()
* Slugification forbidden chars can be configured
* Remove trailing dot/space in quasi_slugify
* Fix NTFS path sanitation
* Revert configurable slugification charset
* Remove \r for windows newlines and \t tabulations in quasi_slugify()
* Update docs for output paths
* Replace slugify with slugify_paths
* Fix test
* Default to not slugifying
* Move slugs utils to utils crate
* Use slugify_paths for anchors as well
* fix the issue of generating the search index for multiple language
* updat docs for generating the search index for multiple language
* fix failed tests
* add tests for the search index of multiple language
Justification for this feature is added in the docs.
Precedent for the precise syntax: Hugo.
Hugo puts this syntax behind a preference named headerIds, and automatic
header ID generation behind a preference named autoHeaderIds, with both
enabled by default. I have not implemented a switch to disable this.
My suggestion for a workaround for the improbable case of desiring a
literal “{#…}” at the end of a header is to replace `}` with `}`.
The algorithm I have used is not identical to [that
which Hugo uses][0], because Hugo’s looks to work at the source level,
whereas here we work at the pulldown-cmark event level, which is
generally more sane, but potentially limiting for extremely esoteric
IDs.
Practical differences in implementation from Hugo (based purely on
reading [blackfriday’s implementation][0], not actually trying it):
- I believe Hugo would treat `# Foo {#*bar*}` as a heading with text
“Foo” and ID `*bar*`, since it is working at the source level; whereas
this code turns it into a heading with HTML `Foo {#<em>bar</em>}`, as
it works at the pulldown-cmark event level and doesn’t go out of its
way to make that work (I’m not familiar with pulldown-cmark, but I get
the impression that you could make it work Hugo’s way on this point).
The difference should be negligible: only *very* esoteric hashes would
include magic Markdown characters.
- Hugo will automatically generate an ID for `{#}`, whereas what I’ve
coded here will yield a blank ID instead (which feels more correct to
me—`None` versus `Some("")`, and all that).
In practice the results should be identical.
Fixes#433.
[0]: a477dd1646/block.go (L218-L234)