Have some real trouble removing some text from the home page of my SharePoint site. I've been told it's a breadcrumb that needs removed and I've tried a few methods they haven't worked and I don't think it is a breadcrumb.
However whenever I open up page editor I can't seem to interact with it, needless to say this isn't my day job!
Text in question.
And this is what it looks like when I hit edit page.
You can override CSS file by adding .ms-core-pageTitle{Display:none !Important;}
https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/sharepoint/en-US/47f10498-d72a-446d-9b26-840fb89f9142/how-to-hide-site-title-in-sharepoint2013?forum=sharepointgeneral
I need to be able to link to another document on the site in the rich text editor by browsing and selecting it without manually typing in a URL to the document. Is this possible with Crafter?
I looked through the documentation about the RTE configuration plugins, and it looked like maybe the insert-component or insert-linkBrowse plugins would do it, but I made an attempt to configure them and add an item in the RTE editor controls, but it had no effect. I couldn't find any documentation specifically about those plugins, so everything I did was just a (wrong) guess.
There is nothing out-of-the-box that addresses this use-case. Options:
Build your model such that it has a repeating group of item pickers after the RTE and then followed by another RTE if need be (this means it won't be inside the RTE), which would make things more structured and arguably cleaner
Build it as a customization (it'll be a TinyMCE plugin)
Wait for the feature to be built by Crafter CMS: https://github.com/craftercms/craftercms/issues/1412
I'm looking for a client-only plugin that can search through a site recursively, looking for a search string on the page or within directly linked text files (.txt, .java, .properties, etc...). The website is an intranet website, so it's restricted (which is why I can't use Google Search).
A lightweight downloadable program would do as well...
I found an addon for FireFox called FoxySpider, which does what you want.
It has a "general" search function which searches for all files of a specific type, and a more "specific" search function.
For the general search: Customize the filetypes you would like to include in the settings panel (firefox addons page).
For the specific search:
Middle-mouse-click on the icon next to the url bar in FireFox you can specify exact filenames.
You can find the add-on here: https://addons.mozilla.org/sv-se/firefox/addon/foxyspider/
Br,
Tim
I'm using a standard link list web part. What I want to achieve is before my users click on the link a pop-up javascript warning box will display, stating that they are leaving the domain. In regular anchor tag I would preceed the URL with javascript:ShowWarning('http://www.youtube.com');.
I've search the AllLinks table in the database but did not find the links was looking for.
Where or how are these stored?
Thanks,
Risho
Firstly, editing the SharePoint database directly is a really bad idea. You shouldn't do it unless you really, really know what you are doing, and even then you will probably break the system.
Secondly, any change made in the data will be what shows up in the editor, and I don't think the editor supports links that don't start with "http://".
A better approach is to use jquery to add the popup behaviour to the links when the page is loaded.
Is there a way to get SharePoint to display code snippets in a pre-formatted way?
Currently if you insert any code, it just looks exactly like the rest of the text. Anything would be better than nothing.
I found hilite.me which produces html styled code which you can insert into a sharpoint wiki.
It supports a number of languages and styles and is an online app.
No because MOSS's wiki is just a new page with the word "wiki" attached to the link.
Even though this is an old question, I have yet another solution that possibly didn't exist at the time the question was asked:
You can create a GitHub Gist and use the embed code for the Gist on the SharePoint wiki page. This is especially useful if you are already using Gist, want to share the code snippet in multiple places aside from the wiki, and/or want to keep a history of the code snippet separate from the rest of the wiki page.
To use an embed code without the script tags being stripped, go to Insert > Embed Code in the ribbon when editing the page:
This solution assumes that you are using an IDE that already formats the code for you.
Some of the other answers would be better if you have a raw text file.
While editing a Sharepoint Wiki page:
Copy code from IDE to new MS Word doc
Highlight all in MS Word: Ctrl+A
Copy again inside MS Word
Switch to wiki page, Paste
Continue editing wiki or save
Works fine with Eclipse as IDE. Might be able to paste straight from VS to SharePoint.
If you have code snippets you will reuse in multiple pages, Use a similar copy/paste technique to save or upload htm files into a SharePoint document library and then insert a "Page Viewer Web Part" to view the htm inside a different page.
Not that I'm aware of if you're specifically using the Wiki feature. Your wiki entries are stored like rows in a table as far as I know. If you're not using the wiki you can use the syntax highlighter tool. It's all javascript. http://code.google.com/p/syntaxhighlighter/
For several weeks we are using Telerik Rad Editor
One of the tools is "Format Code Block"
You may see it here : http://demos.telerik.com/aspnet-ajax/Editor/Examples/Default/DefaultCS.aspx
If you install the RadEditor for MOSS .. we will get this amazing tool in Wiki pages too.
So this is not a great answer but for us it was better then the default. You can write your wiki in a tool like Windows Live writer (WLW). WLW has an add in for a code formatter. If you write your wiki page via WLW with the code formatter you can then go to the Wiki page and select "edit HTML source." You can then copy from WLW to the wiki page and get good styling.
Best way I have found is to use tohtml.com
You can cut and paste your code into it and it will generate html that you can past into your sharepoint wiki
you can use prisimjs to show code snippets. When you add prisimjs and css you can use like this;
p { color: red }
if you want easier solution to use prisimjs, you can check this:
http://yasingokhanyuksel.blogspot.com.tr/2017/07/sharepoint-code-syntax-highlighting.html
If you want this for modern pages, there is the Source code content webpart from Qualitem.
https://spfxhub.com/packages/qualitem-source-code-content-web-part
Disclaimer: I am a co-developer.