"\n"
) and linefeed ("\r"
)
"<"
, ">"
, "&"
, single quote ('
) and double quote ("
)
"%"
, "["
, "]"
, "@"
, "_"
, "*"
, "="
and "|"
%ENCODE{"string"}%
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 ). | type="url" |
type="entity" extra=" $n$r" | For type="entity" only, use the extra parameter to encode additional characters to HTML numeric entities. Formatting tokens can be used, such as "$n" for newline. Note that type="entity" extra=" $n$r" is equivalent to type="html" . | type="url" extra="" |
type="html" | Encode special characters into HTML entities. In addition to type="entity" , it also encodes space, \n and \r . Useful to encode text properly in HTML input fields. See equivalent ENTITY. | type="url" |
%ENCODE{"spaced name"}%
expands to spaced%20name
%ENCODE{"spaced name" type="entity" extra=" "}%
expands to spaced name
"html"
. A shorter %ENTITY{any text}%
can be used instead of the more verbose %ENCODE{ "any text" type="html" }%
. <input type="text" name="address" value="%ENTITY{any text}%" />
%SEARCH{ "%ENCODE{ "string with "quotes"" type="quotes" }%" noheader="on" }%
type="moderate"
, type="safe"
, type="entity"
or type="html"
to protect user input from URL parameters and external sources against cross-site scripting (XSS). type="html"
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.