TinyCode

TinyCode

cybio

TinyCode processes your content and changes the pre-defined shortcodes
(such as [important][/important]) to the correct, and pre-formatted HTML to
highlight a part of the text. For ease of use, you can add the shortcodes with
just a few clicks using a popup at the WYSIWYG-Editor (new button).
The component is compatible with WYSIWYG editors, so you do not need to worry if
you or your client, have little knowledge of HTML.

For more information on how to use the shortcodes take a look at the example page.

Please report bugs and/or feature-request to our ticket-system: Bugtracker/Wiki.
For Support, please use the forum.

The icons used in this plugin are from famfamfam.

Which shortcodes are availible?

  • [dropcap]…some text…[dropcap]
    To highlight the first letter of the text inside the shortcode.
  • [inset lr=”left”]…some content…[/inset]
    To inset a part of the text.
  • [blockquote]…[/blockquote]
    To quote something.
  • [important title=”Sample Title”]…some content…[/important]
    To generate nice style information boxes.
  • [notice type=”alert”]…some text…[/notice]
    To show highlighted notices.

For other questions, take a look at the support forum.

1.2.1

  • [FIX] security (don’t allow script execution outside wordpress)

1.2.0

1.1.2

  • [FIX] Valid HTML-Code seems to be impossible with the autoformat of WordPress. (div is the better solution #2) (#5)

1.1.1

  • [FIX] HTML-Validation error fixed (#2)
  • [FIX] To many colors for quotes in the popup (#3)
  • more information

1.1.0

  • [NEW] WYSIWYG-Editor-Popup to insert shortcodes with just a few mouse clicks (#1)
  • more information

1.0.0

  1. Upload the ‘tinycode’ folder to ‘/wp-content/plugins/’
  2. Activate the plugin through the ‘Plugins’ menu in the WordPress admin
  3. Just use one of the shortcodes and enjoy the plugin 😉

Reviews

0 out of 5 stars

  • Version: 1.2.1
  • Last updated: 15 years ago
  • Active installations: 20
  • WordPress version: 2.5
  • Tested up to: 2.8.4
  • PHP version: false