ENCODE{"string"} -- encodes a string to HTML entities
- Encode "special" characters to HTML numeric entities. Encoded characters are:
- all non-printable ASCII characters below space, except newline (
"\n") and linefeed ("\r")
- HTML special characters
"<", ">", "&", single quote (') and double quote (")
- TWiki special characters
"%", "[", "]", "@", "_", "*", "=" and "|"
- Syntax:
%ENCODE{"string"}%
- Supported parameters:
| Parameter: | Description: | Default: |
"string" | String to encode | required (can be empty) |
type="url" | Encode special characters for URL parameter use, like a double quote into %22 | (this is the default) |
type="quotes" | Escape double quotes with backslashes (\"), does not change other characters. This type does not protect against cross-site scripting. | type="url" |
type="moderate" | Encode special characters into HTML entities for moderate cross-site scripting protection: "<", ">", single quote (') and double quote (") are encoded. Useful to allow TWiki variables in comment boxes. | type="url" |
type="safe" | Encode special characters into HTML entities for cross-site scripting protection: "<", ">", "%", single quote (') and double quote (") are encoded. | type="url" |
type="entity" | Encode special characters into HTML entities, like a double quote into ". Does not encode newline (\n) or linefeed (\r). Useful to encode text properly in HTML input fields. | type="url" |
type="html" | As type="entity" except it also encodes \n and \r | type="url" |
- Example:
%ENCODE{"spaced name"}% expands to spaced%20name
-
Notes:
- Values of HTML input fields must be entity encoded.
Example: <input type="text" name="address" value="%ENCODE{ "any text" type="entity" }%" />
- Double quotes in strings must be escaped when passed into other TWiki variables.
Example: %SEARCH{ "%ENCODE{ "string with "quotes"" type="quotes" }%" noheader="on" }%
- Use
type="moderate", type="safe" or type="entity" to protect user input from URL parameters and external sources against cross-site scripting (XSS). type="entity" is the safest mode, but some TWiki applications might not work. type="safe" provides a safe middle ground, type="moderate" provides only moderate cross-site scripting protection.
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Topic revision: r5 - 2010-03-07 - TWikiContributor