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I am a user, not a programmer, whose forthcoming new website on Plone 4 requires adding hyperlinks inside the Description field of pages and folders. This is needed to point specific words to our website Dictionary as we had been doing on EZ Publish for the last 10 years.

Our developer says this can't be done in Plone. I'm looking to help them find how to do this (they don't seem to use English-language forums).

Is there an existing add-on or existing code for this? If not, is it possible to code this in? How? If not, will it become standard in Plone 5?

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  • Is that "only links and everything else should still be filtered out", and "but we cannot expect our editors to reliably input <a href= style html into the desccription text field? Aug 24, 2015 at 4:47
  • @downvoters: Please leave a note why you're downvoting and consider SO is also used of plone.org to give user-support, thanks.
    – Ida
    Aug 24, 2015 at 6:07
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    It's not this way by default because the description field is a standard Dublin Core metadata field. Having it be plain text insures the text will be semantically meaningful. That doesn't mean you can't change it, but it does explain why it's done this way.
    – SteveM
    Aug 24, 2015 at 14:57
  • Thanks Steve, I just wanted to point that out, too. I think I've read lately (on the lists?), that major search-engines, aren't regarding it anymore, respectively filtering html of the keywords and weighting results 'correctly', but would need to verify.
    – Ida
    Aug 24, 2015 at 16:03
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    Hi Ida. Search engine indexing and the purpose of DC metadata are not necessarily the same. Plone may be old fashioned in actually caring about DC metadata, but if we're ever to have a symantic web, somebody's got to care.
    – SteveM
    Aug 25, 2015 at 4:08

4 Answers 4

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<a href="http://python.org>Python</a> will not work, as the description-field is ment and used as a meta-information of an item, holding plain-text only, and doesn't allow the usage of html-elements, nor embedded Javascript. That's probably why T. K. Nguyen recommends to provide an additional rich-text-field.

But you can use reStrucuredText instead. Tell your developer to exchange the description-snippet in concerned templates to:

<div tal:define="Std modules/Products.PythonScripts/standard;
                 restructured_text nocall: Std/restructured_text;"
    tal:content="structure python: restructured_text(context.Description())">
</div>

It will transform any word starting with 'http:' or 'https:' to a link, furthermore will also recognize mail-addresses like '[email protected]' and transform them to mail-links (on click opens the user's default mail-client, if available, with the address pre-populated in the 'To'-field).

If you want to have named links, use the reStrucutredText-syntax for the input, like this:

`Check out Python`_, you'll love it.

`Write a mail`_ to someone.

.. _Python: http://www.python.org
.. _Write a mail: [email protected]

The tricky part is to figure out, which templates are affected, but it's doable of my experience (did it with preserving line-breaks in listing-views, not reStructuredText).

Alternatively use a JS-workaround, as proposed by T. K. Nguyen. Be aware though, that it may break accessibility to some users.

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It is possible to customize the description fields to be rich text (HTML) instead of plain text, but it requires a developer.

You can also use JavaScript to look at a description field and replace (for example) any string that starts with "http" with a hyperlink pointing to that URL. Your developer would have to look for examples of such JavaScript code and then would have to know how to register it on your site and then invoke it.

This describes how to do something similar, for PloneFormGen field help text (which is also plain text):

https://designinterventionsystems.com/blog/how-to-make-urls-clickable-in-ploneformgen-field-help-text

It might be easier to have your developer create a new rich-text description field and have all your content types include that new field. That, however, would require that you update the view templates for those modified content types. This is much easier with Dexterity, which ships with Plone 5 and is available for use with Plone 4.x.

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  • Dear all,Thank you for your answers. Here are my comments back: 1. We need the hyperlink tool for INTERNAL links, ie to objects, not urls. 2. From a user point of view, this is a need, why not make Plone user-friendly here? Aug 24, 2015 at 13:05
  • 3. This is standard on EZPublish, similar object-oriented build, since < 2005, when we built the site. Examples on just 1p of EZ to show you how frequent it is for us: www.graines-de-paix.org/fr/outils_de_paix/dictionnaire_pour_la_paix/%28offset%29/10. We just migrated to Plone and these links need not only to remain but many more need to be created. So which of your solutions would best work for official launch and what could be planned for future release? Thanks Aug 24, 2015 at 13:25
  • 4. Our website is multi-lingual: will be in 10 languages. Translations are done online by volunteer translators. No html coding envisageable. It needs to be as easy as in the text body. Aug 24, 2015 at 13:28
  • 5. This need is even greater for folders as they have no body in which to put the object hyperlinks. Aug 24, 2015 at 14:02
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    Old-style collections are still available in Plone; you have to enable them via the Site Setup -> Types panel or check the box for "implicitly addable" in portal_types/Topic Aug 26, 2015 at 6:15
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imho it's a really bad idea to convert the description field to any richttext (html, rst, md) field. You need to change a hole bunch of templates to avoid html code rendered everywhere.

Example:

  • search
  • collections
  • content
  • portlets
  • Addons

The description is also often used as title attribute on links, in those cases you need to convert it to plain/text. And there are several more issues, where you could ran into.

As @T. Kim Nguyen wrote: Consider add a new textfield and show it, where necessary, probably implemented as a Viewlet in the below title slot.

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    Thanks for giving a list of some examples, which templates need to be regarded, as mentioned by Nguyen and me, already. I came up with the reStructuredText-variant, to avoid the need to apply a richtext-editor like TinyMCE, and that would also work perfectly fine, if links aren't named, but by now the new comments of the OP revealed that a richtext-widget, is wanted. To use a viewlet would be a really bad idea imho, because it'll not be a CT's field, anymore; not part of the item's form. Tooltips could be customized also, e.g. with JQ-UI, btw.
    – Ida
    Aug 24, 2015 at 16:06
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Looking at your current site, it seems like you want this to provide a teaser for each article, which may contain links. If that is the case, then you can find other ways to do this without making the description html.

For instance, if you used collective.cover for your portal/collection pages then a Rich Text Tile would allow you to cut down the the object text to an appropriate size, but still edit it with a Rich Text editor, and keep/insert hyperlinks.

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  • Thank you! Your answer seems appropriate. I've given the link to this page f Q and As to our developer who comes back on the 14th of Sept. He'll liaise from then on directly on this forum and let us know if this solution works. Aug 29, 2015 at 13:57
  • @Grainesdepaix glad to hear - don't be scared to upvote!
    – Danimal
    Sep 1, 2015 at 10:30

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