On Saturday 05 August 2006 00:45, Alberto Lusiani wrote:
Hi there,
On 8/5/06, Morbus Iff <morbus@disobey.com> wrote:
[...] Actually, for what it's worth, we should NOT use internal:// or *any* foo:// patterns. Doing so, even internally, is a creation of what appears to be a new protocol, even though it's actually not. We should instead create a new URN, such as internal:node/4. Apple, in the past two years or so, I think, got flamed for using webcal:// for it's iCal application, where webcal was merely a file format, and not a protocol.
I agree. I would propose to use some wiki convention, like wikipedia's [[node label | internal:node/1]].
I will leave the question of internal: vs. internal:// to people who are more pedantic than I (which is quite a feat, believe me <g>), but please let us not go down the wiki path. I despite wikis and everything about them, primarily due to their insistence on creating a completely new obscure markup syntax that does nothing but render down to HTML anyway. If you're going to write markup that ends up as HTML, WHY learn yet another syntax instead of just using what already works and is more self-descriptive and self-documenting anyway (HTML)?
By the way, although I am listening since some time, this is the first message I post. I am using Drupal for a web site about a conference (http://www.pi.infn.it/congressi/tau06/). I did some php coding for it, a theme and something that could become a conference module.
In that web site I use the wiki module, where one can use [label | http:?q=node] for internal links. This would break if Drupal changes the ?q= notation.
Greetings,
Welcome to Drupal, and don't mine the egos. :-) None of it's personal; we just care a great deal about what we do, and all believe we're right. It is the way of things. -- Larry Garfield AIM: LOLG42 larry@garfieldtech.com ICQ: 6817012 "If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it." -- Thomas Jefferson