Arbitrary Page Names #
If you enclose a sequence of characters in square brackets and double quotes
["like this"], that makes it a page name. That can be used for specific uses of
?MoinMoin (like organizing a list of items, e.g. your CD collection, by their "natural" name), or if you want to create a wiki with a non-western character encoding.
?URLs and Inline Images #
There are several way to insert external references into the text:
- direct URL insertion; if the URL ends in an image extension (".gif", ".jpg" or ".png"), the URL is converted to an image tag.
- bracketed ?URLs.
- ?InterWiki links.
- email addresses with mailto: tag.
If you enter
?URLs into normal text, there is the problem of detecting what belongs to the URL and what not. There are four ways to force the ending of an URL:
- put a space after the URL.
- use the SixSingleQuotes escaping.
- put the URL into double quotes.
- use the bracketed URL syntax.
The supported URL schemas are:
http:,
https:,
ftp:,
nntp:,
news:,
mailto:,
telnet:, and
file:. Please see
?HelpOnConfiguration to extend this schemas.
In addition to the standard schemas, there are
?MoinMoin-specific ones:
wiki:,
attachment:,
inline:, and
drawing:. "
wiki:" indicates an
?InterWiki link, so
FrontPage and
FrontPage are equivalent; you will normally prefer the shorter form, the "
wiki" scheme becomes important when you use bracketed links, since there you always need a scheme. The other three schemes are related to file attachments and are explained on
?HelpOnActions/AttachFile.
inline: and
drawing: are not supported by
MoniWiki.
You can surpress
WikiName linking by putting an exclamation mark (
bang) before the
WikiName, i.e.
!WikiName WikiName. and you can force linking by putting a question mark before any word, i.e.
?Hello ?Hello.
?MoinMoin does not support force linking feature.