anchor hash ignores other url parameters - html

I have footnotes in page as:
footnote.
however if current location of the page is
www.domain.com/?q=something,
the resulting url of footnote is
not www.domain.com/?q=something#footnote,
but www.domain.com/#footnote
so is absolute url usage is the only solution for above, or there some techniques to come over this?
thanks

I just tried that in Chrome and it worked fine. By default, a browser will assume it's a relative URL (unless the format indicates otherwise).

From what you're posting here, I hardly see how it can fail. If you provided some more info, maybe people can help.

But it will happen at IE.
You can try this
jQuery(document).ready(function($) {
$body = (window.opera) ? (document.compatMode == "CSS1Compat" ? $('html') : $('body')) : $('html,body');
$body.animate({scrollTop: jQuery('.youcalss').offset().top}, 1000);
})

Related

How to set the URI to "/%25"?

I want to display /%25 as my URI. I tried
history.replace("%25");
But for some reason this translates to /%.
I know this isn't a browser issue since this works:
document.location.href = "%25";
How can I set the URI to /%25 with react-router?
"Fixed" it like this:
history.replace(url.replace("%25", "%2525"));
This doesn't work for more than one % though.

Anchor Tag Not working

I Have a two anchor tag for look like below
<a href="www.exx.com" target="_blank">
AnnualBudget</a>
When i click the above Anchor tag ,Its not gone correct URL(For it's gone to Mydomainname/www.exx.com). But the same time below anchor tag is working and go to correct url .
<a href="https://www.exx.com" target="_blank">
AnnualBudget</a>
Why www is not worked but https is worked ? And How can i solve this issue ?
Update :
The url is entered from user in textbox .So how can i check it ?
Try putting a "http://" in front.
I.e.
AnnualBudget
"www" is not a protocol/scheme. HTTPS or HTTP are protocols.
Absolute URLs have to have a "scheme" in front, see details about URLs on Wikipedia.
Alternatively, this would also work:
AnnualBudget
Update 1:
Since you comment that your input comes from the user, let me add this one:
(Although this refers to SQL injection, the same would be true for all user input).
Update 2:
To check the input for an absolute URL, do something like:
// Read from user input, e.g. (WebForms syntax!):
string my = MyTextBox.Text.Trim();
// Do some checking (this has be done much more thoroughly in real-life!)
if ( !my.StartsWith("http://") && !my.StartsWith("https://") )
{
my = "http://" + my;
}
// Do something with "my", e.g. (again, WebForms syntax only):
MyHyperLink.NavigateUrl = my;
(Please note that I'm no MVC expert, the above pseudo-code uses WebForms syntax instead)

hard link a Rel in the URL

Is it possible to make a link such that it brings up the REL of a topic,
for example if a link is
Click here
Is it possible to have a user link so when they go to the page it automatically opens the lightbox?
For example http://example.com/?rel=lightbox&src=picture.jpg
or something like that?
Yes, but no browsers include a lightbox, so you'd need to write or find code to make one of those as well.
Yes, it is possible. You may better use URLs like http://domain.com/#lightbox, and write a little script:
//jQuery sample
$(document).ready(function() {
if (location.hash == "#lightbox") {
//Just show your lightbox manually
}
});
you can do that with a bit of jQuery
$(a[rel=lightbox]).click(function(e) {
// open the lightbox with the link url inside
return false
});

Can I create links with 'target="_blank"' in Markdown?

Is there a way to create a link in Markdown that opens in a new window? If not, what syntax do you recommend to do this? I'll add it to the markdown compiler I use. I think it should be an option.
As far as the Markdown syntax is concerned, if you want to get that detailed, you'll just have to use HTML.
Hello, world!
Most Markdown engines I've seen allow plain old HTML, just for situations like this where a generic text markup system just won't cut it. (The StackOverflow engine, for example.) They then run the entire output through an HTML whitelist filter, regardless, since even a Markdown-only document can easily contain XSS attacks. As such, if you or your users want to create _blank links, then they probably still can.
If that's a feature you're going to be using often, it might make sense to create your own syntax, but it's generally not a vital feature. If I want to launch that link in a new window, I'll ctrl-click it myself, thanks.
Kramdown supports it. It's compatible with standard Markdown syntax, but has many extensions, too. You would use it like this:
[link](url){:target="_blank"}
I don't think there is a markdown feature, although there may be other options available if you want to open links which point outside your own site automatically with JavaScript.
Array.from(javascript.links)
.filter(link => link.hostname != window.location.hostname)
.forEach(link => link.target = '_blank');
jsFiddle.
If you're using jQuery:
$(document.links).filter(function() {
return this.hostname != window.location.hostname;
}).attr('target', '_blank');
jsFiddle.
With Markdown v2.5.2, you can use this:
[link](URL){:target="_blank"}
So, it isn't quite true that you cannot add link attributes to a Markdown URL. To add attributes, check with the underlying markdown parser being used and what their extensions are.
In particular, pandoc has an extension to enable link_attributes, which allow markup in the link. e.g.
[Hello, world!](http://example.com/){target="_blank"}
For those coming from R (e.g. using rmarkdown, bookdown, blogdown and so on), this is the syntax you want.
For those not using R, you may need to enable the extension in the call to pandoc with +link_attributes
Note: This is different than the kramdown parser's support, which is one the accepted answers above. In particular, note that kramdown differs from pandoc since it requires a colon -- : -- at the start of the curly brackets -- {}, e.g.
[link](http://example.com){:hreflang="de"}
In particular:
# Pandoc
{ attribute1="value1" attribute2="value2"}
# Kramdown
{: attribute1="value1" attribute2="value2"}
^
^ Colon
One global solution is to put <base target="_blank">
into your page's <head> element. That effectively adds a default target to every anchor element. I use markdown to create content on my Wordpress-based web site, and my theme customizer will let me inject that code into the top of every page. If your theme doesn't do that, there's a plug-in
Not a direct answer, but may help some people ending up here.
If you are using GatsbyJS there is a plugin that automatically adds target="_blank" to external links in your markdown.
It's called gatsby-remark-external-links and is used like so:
yarn add gatsby-remark-external-links
plugins: [
{
resolve: `gatsby-transformer-remark`,
options: {
plugins: [{
resolve: "gatsby-remark-external-links",
options: {
target: "_blank",
rel: "noopener noreferrer"
}
}]
}
},
It also takes care of the rel="noopener noreferrer".
Reference the docs if you need more options.
For ghost markdown use:
[Google](https://google.com" target="_blank)
Found it here:
https://cmatskas.com/open-external-links-in-a-new-window-ghost/
I'm using Grav CMS and this works perfectly:
Body/Content:
Some text[1]
Body/Reference:
[1]: http://somelink.com/?target=_blank
Just make sure that the target attribute is passed first, if there are additional attributes in the link, copy/paste them to the end of the reference URL.
Also work as direct link:
[Go to this page](http://somelink.com/?target=_blank)
You can do this via native javascript code like so:
var pattern = /a href=/g;
var sanitizedMarkDownText = rawMarkDownText.replace(pattern,"a target='_blank' href=");
JSFiddle Code
In my project I'm doing this and it works fine:
[Link](https://example.org/ "title" target="_blank")
Link
But not all parsers let you do that.
There's no easy way to do it, and like #alex has noted you'll need to use JavaScript. His answer is the best solution but in order to optimize it, you might want to filter only to the post-content links.
<script>
var links = document.querySelectorAll( '.post-content a' );
for (var i = 0, length = links.length; i < length; i++) {
if (links[i].hostname != window.location.hostname) {
links[i].target = '_blank';
}
}
</script>
The code is compatible with IE8+ and you can add it to the bottom of your page. Note that you'll need to change the ".post-content a" to the class that you're using for your posts.
As seen here: http://blog.hubii.com/target-_blank-for-links-on-ghost/
If someone is looking for a global rmarkdown (pandoc) solution.
Using Pandoc Lua Filter
You could write your own Pandoc Lua Filter which adds target="_blank" to all links:
Write a Pandoc Lua Filter, name it for example links.lua
function Link(element)
if
string.sub(element.target, 1, 1) ~= "#"
then
element.attributes.target = "_blank"
end
return element
end
Then update your _output.yml
bookdown::gitbook:
pandoc_args:
- --lua-filter=links.lua
Inject <base target="_blank"> in Header
An alternative solution would be to inject <base target="_blank"> in the HTML head section using the includes option:
Create a new HTML file, name it for example links.html
<base target="_blank">
Then update your _output.yml
bookdown::gitbook:
includes:
in_header: links.html
Note: This solution may also open new tabs for hash (#) pointers/URLs. I have not tested this solution with such URLs.
In Laravel I solved it this way:
$post->text= Str::replace('<a ', '<a target="_blank"', $post->text);
Not works for a specific link. Edit all links in the Markdown text. (In my case it's fine)
I ran into this problem when trying to implement markdown using PHP.
Since the user generated links created with markdown need to open in a new tab but site links need to stay in tab I changed markdown to only generate links that open in a new tab. So not all links on the page link out, just the ones that use markdown.
In markdown I changed all the link output to be <a target='_blank' href="..."> which was easy enough using find/replace.
I do not agree that it's a better user experience to stay within one browser tab. If you want people to stay on your site, or come back to finish reading that article, send them off in a new tab.
Building on #davidmorrow's answer, throw this javascript into your site and turn just external links into links with target=_blank:
<script type="text/javascript" charset="utf-8">
// Creating custom :external selector
$.expr[':'].external = function(obj){
return !obj.href.match(/^mailto\:/)
&& (obj.hostname != location.hostname);
};
$(function(){
// Add 'external' CSS class to all external links
$('a:external').addClass('external');
// turn target into target=_blank for elements w external class
$(".external").attr('target','_blank');
})
</script>
You can add any attributes using {[attr]="[prop]"}
For example [Google] (http://www.google.com){target="_blank"}
For completed alex answered (Dec 13 '10)
A more smart injection target could be done with this code :
/*
* For all links in the current page...
*/
$(document.links).filter(function() {
/*
* ...keep them without `target` already setted...
*/
return !this.target;
}).filter(function() {
/*
* ...and keep them are not on current domain...
*/
return this.hostname !== window.location.hostname ||
/*
* ...or are not a web file (.pdf, .jpg, .png, .js, .mp4, etc.).
*/
/\.(?!html?|php3?|aspx?)([a-z]{0,3}|[a-zt]{0,4})$/.test(this.pathname);
/*
* For all link kept, add the `target="_blank"` attribute.
*/
}).attr('target', '_blank');
You could change the regexp exceptions with adding more extension in (?!html?|php3?|aspx?) group construct (understand this regexp here: https://regex101.com/r/sE6gT9/3).
and for a without jQuery version, check code below:
var links = document.links;
for (var i = 0; i < links.length; i++) {
if (!links[i].target) {
if (
links[i].hostname !== window.location.hostname ||
/\.(?!html?)([a-z]{0,3}|[a-zt]{0,4})$/.test(links[i].pathname)
) {
links[i].target = '_blank';
}
}
}
Automated for external links only, using GNU sed & make
If one would like to do this systematically for all external links, CSS is no option. However, one could run the following sed command once the (X)HTML has been created from Markdown:
sed -i 's|href="http|target="_blank" href="http|g' index.html
This can be further automated by adding above sed command to a makefile. For details, see GNU make or see how I have done that on my website.
If you just want to do this in a specific link, just use the inline attribute list syntax as others have answered, or just use HTML.
If you want to do this in all generated <a> tags, depends on your Markdown compiler, maybe you need an extension of it.
I am doing this for my blog these days, which is generated by pelican, which use Python-Markdown. And I found an extension for Python-Markdown Phuker/markdown_link_attr_modifier, it works well. Note that an old extension called newtab seems not work in Python-Markdown 3.x.
For React + Markdown environment:
I created a reusable component:
export type TargetBlankLinkProps = {
label?: string;
href?: string;
};
export const TargetBlankLink = ({
label = "",
href = "",
}: TargetBlankLinkProps) => (
<a href={href} target="__blank">
{label}
</a>
);
And I use it wherever I need a link that open in a new window.
For "markdown-to-jsx" with MUI v5
This seem to work for me:
import Markdown from 'markdown-to-jsx';
...
const MarkdownLink = ({ children, ...props }) => (
<Link {...props}>{children}</Link>
);
...
<Markdown
options={{
forceBlock: true,
overrides: {
a: {
component: MarkdownLink,
props: {
target: '_blank',
},
},
},
}}
>
{description}
</Markdown>
This works for me: [Page Link](your url here "(target|_blank)")

Base tag messing with bookmark links

I have a Joomla site which uses mod_rewrite to create pretty urls.
http://www.example.com/resources/newsletter
However this created a problem. Including images like this: src="images/pic.jpg", it would then look for a file at:
http://www.example.com/resources/newsletter/images/pic.jpg
...which obviously doesn't exist. To work around this, I included a <base> tag in my head section:
<base href="http://www.example.com/" />
...which worked fine, until I tried to do a link to an anchor point (bookmark) on the same page:
<!-- on http://www.example.com/resources/newsletter -->
go to the footer
<!-- clicking that link takes you to http://www.example.com/#footer -->
Changing my links to be <a href="resources/newsletter/#footer"> is not feasible, since I won't necessarily know the URL of the page when editing it. Is there any way to make some links ignore the <base> directive?
Though I'd really prefer a straight HTML solution, I'm using jQuery on this site already, so that could be an option if I'm stuck.
Is it possible to change your src attribute to be something like /images/pic.jpg? That'll achieve the effect you're looking for.
If that's not possible, this (untested) jQuery code should work for you:
$('a[#href^="#"]').click(function() {
var hash = this.hash, el = $(hash), offset;
if(!el.size()) {
el = $("[#name=" + hash.slice(1) + "]");
}
offset = el.offset();
window.scroll(offset.left, offset.top);
});
Old question, new answer..
Try this:
$('a[href^="#"]').on('click', function (event) {
event.preventDefault();
window.location.hash = $(this).attr('href');
});