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Posted by:
Joe Brinkman
9/8/2010 10:36 AM
I have been using Windows Live Writer (WLW) for a few years now. I really love WLW for writing my blog. In fact I loved it so much that it was one of the reasons I had shifted my personal blog to BlogEngine.net. At the time, the DotNetNuke Blog module did not support a posting API which could be used with WLW. You don’t know real pain until you have tried to write a blog post with nothing but a web based rich text editor. Once you lose one or two posts because of a session timeout or your post gets mangled because of the way the editor handles script blocks or xml blocks, you will quickly swear off all blogging with an RTE. Once I started using BlogEngine, I came to really appreciate some of its features. It really tries to leverage the capabilities of WLW to make the blogging experience as pain free as possible. One feature that I use quite a bit is the ability to split my blog into a summary along with the full post just by including the “[more]” tag in my post. Everything before the tag will be used when displaying the blog summaries. The entire content will be displayed when viewing a specific blog post. This is great, although it does limit your ability to craft a great summary that differs from the opening of your blog post. Unfortunately, the DotNetNuke Blog module does not support the “[more]” tag. If you don’t provide a summary when creating a post for the Blog module, then it will try to create a summary using the first 1000 or so characters. This rarely works with my blog posts and even when it works it is generally not optimal. Because I usually include an image at the top of my posts, the auto-summary feature usually just chokes and I am forced to hand enter a summary for my blog on DotNetNuke.com. This is definitely a problem. My blog posts often include coding examples. When I edit a blog post just so I can hand craft the summary, it also has the side effect of opening the main blog content in the RTE which then reformats my code blocks when I go to save the summary. Hello mangled code samples. Recently, while reviewing my Hacktaculous post, I re-opened it using the new WLW Beta. Imagine my surprise when I was greeted with this image  Notice that this post includes both my summary as well as the full post and is separated by a dotted line with the word “More…”. In looking at the source tab I see in the HTML that I have both a summary section and the full content section separated by <!—more—>. This is awesome! After playing around with this for a bit, I found that the DotNetNuke Blog fully supports this feature. I can create my summary along with my full blog post all within WLW. When posted to a DotNetNuke Blog, the summary and blog content are both posted correctly and I no longer have to hand edit my entry after posting to my company blog on DotNetNuke.com. Now I can have real summaries which are not just the first couple of paragraphs of my blog post and I don’t have to worry about mangling my code examples. After a little further research I found that there is a “split post” button on the insert tab on the new ribbon bar. This button inserts the magical <!—more—> comment tag into my post.  I don’t know how long this feature has existed in WLW or how long it has been supported by DotNetNuke Blog. For me it is brand new. As a fairly prolific DotNetNuke blogger, I am betting that it is probably new for many others in the DotNetNuke community as well.
3 comment(s) so far...
Re: DotNetNuke Tips and Tricks #18: Just to Summarize
Awesome - I was just about to publish my blog and I saw this, so I tried it and it works flawlessly. One thing I noticed is that the "Split Post" option only became enabled when I switched from my BlogEngine.Net site to my DNN Blog.
By Charles Nurse on
9/10/2010 11:34 AM
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Re: DotNetNuke Tips and Tricks #18: Just to Summarize
Joe, this feature has been there since we released the wlw support (3.3.0, I believe). Too bad you missed it all this time!
;-)
By Antonio Chagoury on
9/10/2010 11:35 AM
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Re: DotNetNuke Tips and Tricks #18: Just to Summarize
Thanks for this excellent tip Joe. Very helpful, as I agree WLW is definitely the way to go for blogging.
By Rob Ralston on
9/10/2010 11:35 AM
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