public
Description: Manage markup close to home... right in the model! Caching, validation, etc
Homepage:
Clone URL: git://github.com/technicalpickles/has_markup.git
Sat May 02 21:52:46 -0700 2009
commit  fe9e08f2277045517d4c659e6aa2674139e1d086
tree    71f9c5f79cd4e6f51f4fa2275181cf2997b5aa52
parent  e5dfd429ffe2812771efbc91002dd75617803cca
README
= HasMarkup

I don't know about you, but I'm not too much of a fan of writing out raw HTML when I'm trying to belt out some blog 
posts. Keeping track of those pesky closing tags, escaping entities, and so on, can really get in the way of your 
creativity.

As a result, most blogs provide a simplified markup or some sort of editor. For 
technicalpickles.com[http://technicalpickles.com], I went with markdown[http://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/].

I extracted this markup magic out of my blog, and this plugin is the result. It lets you:

 * Specify a column contains markup
 * Specify the syntax (markdown and textile, with markdown being the default)
 * Specify if the markup column is required
 * Generate a helper for generating the HTML
 * Specify if the HTML should be cached in the database
 * ... all using only one line

== Example

In your model:

  class Post
    has_markup :content, :syntax => :markdown, :required => true, :cache_html => true
  end
  
Now post will have a 'content_html' method for generating the

So, you can use it in your view:

  <h2><%= h @post.title %></h2>
  <div>
    <%= @post.cached_content_html %>
  </div>

And you can test it easily using Shoulda:

  require 'has_markup/shoulda'
  class PostTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
    should_have_markup :content, :syntax => :markdown, :required => true, :cache_html => true
  end

== License

Copyright (c) 2008 Josh Nichols, released under the MIT license