Sha256: 4eb1541fe1e48e3c9d74caeff8a7a41219fe9ad7dbf8d46db8d7da4dab1ec954

Contents?: true

Size: 1.26 KB

Versions: 1

Compression:

Stored size: 1.26 KB

Contents

<% @title = "Search results for \"#{@params["query"]}\"" %>

<% unless @title_results.empty? %>
<h2><%= @title_results.length %> page(s) containing search string in the page name:</h2>
  <ul>
    <% for page in @title_results %>
      <li>
        <%= link_to page.plain_name, :web => @web.address, :action => 'show', :id => page.name %>
      </li>
    <% end %>
  </ul>
<% end %>


<% unless @results.empty? %>
  <h2> <%= @results.length %> page(s) containing search string in the page text:</h2>
  <ul>
    <% for page in @results %>
      <li>
        <%= link_to page.plain_name, :web => @web.address, :action => 'show', :id => page.name %>
      </li>
    <% end %>
  </ul>
<% end %>

<% if (@results + @title_results).empty? %>
  <h2>No pages contains "<%= @params["query"] %>" </h2>
  <p>
    Perhaps you should try expanding your query. Remember that Instiki searches for entire 
    phrases, so if you search for "all that jazz" it will not match pages that contain these 
    words in separation&mdash;only as a sentence fragment.
  </p>
  <p>
    If you're a high-tech computer wizard, you might even want try constructing a Ruby regular 
    expression. That's actually what Instiki uses, so go right ahead and flex your 
    "[a-z]*Leet?RegExpSkill(s|z)"
  </p>
<% end %>

Version data entries

1 entries across 1 versions & 1 rubygems

Version Path
instiki-0.10.0 app/views/wiki/search.rhtml