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writing articles and quoting source code in TikiWiki

Special cases to be aware of


Writing $0 and has to be written like \$0 or it wont work in CODE tags.

The same goes for "[" (square bracket). This has be be written as [ or it wont be showed at all.

Finally, you also have to enable the "wiki" option for CODE tag, or other things might not show up correctly.

Speaking of the "wiki" option, this goes in the CODE tag inside () and it done like "wiki=>1".

If you have to write < or > you may need to put spaces before and after this character, or it will eat up text because of a bad parsing engine.

  • + : A leading plus sign indicates that this word must be present in every object returned.
  • - : A leading minus sign indicates that this word must not be present in any row returned.
  • By default (when neither plus nor minus is specified) the word is optional, but the object that contain it will be rated higher.
  • < > : These two operators are used to change a word's contribution to the relevance value that is assigned to a row.
  • ( ) : Parentheses are used to group words into subexpressions.
  • ~ : A leading tilde acts as a negation operator, causing the word's contribution to the object relevance to be negative. It's useful for marking noise words. An object that contains such a word will be rated lower than others, but will not be excluded altogether, as it would be with the - operator.
  • * : An asterisk is the truncation operator. Unlike the other operators, it should be appended to the word, not prepended.
  • " : The phrase, that is enclosed in double quotes ", matches only objects that contain this phrase literally, as it was typed.

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