This solves two problems: first, the relationships are now defined in
the class they apply to, rather than in a separate section of the module,
and second, their metadata -- both creation arguments and extra info such
as `description` (or, later, possibly, info for API properties) -- is
stored.
Some code in spline-pokedex orders by `id`, which has worse consequences
than it may seem (e.g. instead of defaulting to most recent games, the
comparifier defaults to XD). This is the first step to fixing that.
etree and AtomicString will be moved in python-markdown 2.1
See commit https://github.com/waylan/Python-Markdown/commit/89a4f3d0829a7 :
Cleaned up markdown namespace. This may be a backward incompatible
change for some extensions. They should be importing from
markdown.util
No reason to instantiate every time as_html's called, is there?
Also, sessions use a markdown_extension attribute instead of
markdown_extension_class. The latter is only used to set the former when
the session is created (unless another markdown_extension_class is given,
of course).
Links such as []{pokemon:mewthree} can come from users, so they should not
crash the parser.
So, when an object is not found (or more than one is found), call
identifier_url() directly, instead of failing to get the object for
object_url(). Essentially, treat the link as having an unknown category
(like mechanic:, currently).
The test that check the pokédex descriptions updated so that only
links to known objects and "mechanic:" are allowed.
Linked-to objects aren't required to have identifiers now, so object_url()
in custom extensions might need to be changed.
The one in the test did, for example.
Previously, every single spline-pokedex request tacked another markdown
extension onto a global list in spline, making markdown processing just
a little bit slower over time. This is terrible.
Now we do something a little less crazy and a little more global. Wait,
is that less crazy or more?
- the Session has a `pokedex_link_maker` property, whose `object_url`
method is used to make URLs in Markdown
- pokemon.names_table.name is now an ordinary Unicode column
- pokemon.name is a MarkdownString that is aware of the session and the
language the string is in
- pokemon.name_map is a dict-like association_proxy of the above
- move.effect works similarly, with transparent $effect_chance substitution
as before
- as_text() is now a function that takes the session as an argument
- likewise as_html(), which also takes URL makers and the language
- since there should be only one link extension, it is registered by
setting default_link_extension, not appending to markdown_extensions.
This only affects the __html__ attribute.
Sometimes, translations are incomplete. Handle this gracefully by allowing
fallback languages. If there are none, fall back to the identifier to get
at least some order.
(Translations cannot be dumped properly because the source string hash
isn't in the database.)
By default, unofficial texts are only dumped for English, but that can
be configured if someone wants CSVs for different language(s).
Official texts (<thing>_names rows for official languages) are always
dumped.