Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
David Taylor
0878dde213
DEV: Modernise highlightjs loading (#24197)
- Remove vendored copy
- Update Rails implementation to look for language definitions in node_modules
- Use webpack-based dynamic import for hljs core
- Use browser-native dynamic import for site-specific language bundle (and fallback to webpack-based dynamic import in tests)
- Simplify markdown implementation to allow all languages into the `lang-{blah}` className
- Now that all languages are passed through, resolve aliases at runtime to avoid the need for the pre-built `highlightjs-aliases` index
2023-11-10 20:39:48 +00:00
Bianca Nenciu
277496b6e0
FIX: Replace watched words with wildcards (#24279)
These have been broken since fd07c943ad
because watched words were not correctly transformed to regexps.
This partially reverts the changes.
2023-11-08 18:51:11 +02:00
Godfrey Chan
9a1695ccc1
DEV: remove markdown-it-bundle and custom build code (#23859)
With Embroider, we can rely on async `import()` to do the splitting
for us.

This commit extracts from `pretty-text` all the parts that are
meant to be loaded async into a new `discourse-markdown-it` package
that is also a V2 addon (meaning that all files are presumed unused
until they are imported, aka "static").

Mostly I tried to keep the very discourse specific stuff (accessing
site settings and loading plugin features) inside discourse proper,
while the new package aims to have some resembalance of a general
purpose library, a MarkdownIt++ if you will. It is far from perfect
because of how all the "options" stuff work but I think it's a good
start for more refactorings (clearing up the interfaces) to happen
later.

With this, pretty-text and app/lib/text are mostly a kitchen sink
of loosely related text processing utilities.

After the refactor, a lot more code related to setting up the
engine are now loaded lazily, which should be a pretty nice win. I
also noticed that we are currently pulling in the `xss` library at
initial load to power the "sanitize" stuff, but I suspect with a
similar refactoring effort those usages can be removed too. (See
also #23790).

This PR does not attempt to fix the sanitize issue, but I think it
sets things up on the right trajectory for that to happen later.

Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
2023-11-06 16:59:49 +00:00