Site Manager Developer Manual / Version 2307
Table Of Contents
The aim of the
coremedia-richtext-1.0.css
file is twofold. First, it defines the look of the XML
elements in the RichText pane according to the CSS definitions (see
http://www.w3c.org), but secondly it is used as the definition of
the possible attributes.
Caution
The RichText pane supports only a subset of CSS.
You can use well known CSS syntax to define your own style groups and styles. Nevertheless, the RichText pane of the Site Manager does not support the display of all possible CSS formats. Some formats will be displayed in a WYSIWYG style (such as bold, italic, understroke ...) others will be displayed symbolic (color, value of a Style group etc.). The actual layout of the text depends on the definitions and structure of the generated website and can only be seen in the HTML preview of the browser.
Getting the file and add it to the editor
The
coremedia-richtext-1.0.css
file is included in a JAR file. So in order to add your extensions
you have to get the file and put the changed file to a new location. Proceed as follows:
Build the
editor-components
module in the development workspace of CoreMedia Project.Extract the
coremedia-richtext-1.0.css
file from thecap-editor-resources.jar
file in thetarget/../lib
directory.Customize the file to your needs.
Put the file into the
properties/css
directory of theeditor
module.Configure the property
editor.richtext.css.location
ineditor.properties
to theproperties/css/coremedia-richtext-1.0.css
location in order to override the default CSS file.
Define new style groups
A style group is a list of CSS style classes, that share a common prefix ending with "--". For example,
[font-name--arial, font-name--times]
is a style group
font-name
consisting of the two styles classes
font-name--arial
and
font-name--times
. You can limit the usage of your style group to single
elements by adding the name of the element in front of the style group separated by a dot.
Caution
Due to limitations in the Swing CSS class use only lower case letters for the names of style groups and style classes.
Simply add the new StyleGroup to the
coremedia-richtext-1.0.css
file following the naming pattern
given above. The following example adds a new
style group
inlineformat
with the two style classes
code
and glossary
to the CSS
file. Text marked as code will be displayed with red background, text marked as glossary with blue background.
.inlineformat--code { background-color: red; }
.inlineformat--glossary { background-color: blue; }
Define new style classes
The style classes are defined as described above. Simply add an entry following the scheme:
<LimitedElement>.<StyleGroupName>--<StyleClassName> { <layout definition> }
Define free text style group
If you want to define a style group without predefined style classes where the user can enter own text proceed as follows:
Define a style group without style classes, for example:
.freetext {background: blue;}
Add the style group to the Content Editor as explained in Section 3.6.4, “Add to Content Editor”.
This style sheet group will only appear in the attribute editors but not in the tool bar.