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This displays the entire <description> if it's 200 characters or fewer, otherwise displays the first 200 characters followed by an ellipsis. (200 is just arbitrary.) e.g.:
But I think some people have the entire HTML blog post within <description>, between <![CDATA[ and ]]>. This might be problematic if it's truncated mid-tag, or between opening and closing tags? Or maybe the HTML itself would be visible?
AFAIK there isn't a way to detect if the description starts with ![CDATA[ or not, so I'm not sure if this idea can be reliably generalised.
But, given I know my feeds only have a brief plaintext description, I've gone with the above.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
My RSS feeds include a short plain text description of each post in the
<description>
element within each<item>
.These aren't rendered by the current
pretty-feed-v3.xsl
file.I've added something like this, between the item title and Published date:
This displays the entire
<description>
if it's 200 characters or fewer, otherwise displays the first 200 characters followed by an ellipsis. (200 is just arbitrary.) e.g.:But I think some people have the entire HTML blog post within
<description>
, between<![CDATA[
and]]>
. This might be problematic if it's truncated mid-tag, or between opening and closing tags? Or maybe the HTML itself would be visible?AFAIK there isn't a way to detect if the description starts with
![CDATA[
or not, so I'm not sure if this idea can be reliably generalised.But, given I know my feeds only have a brief plaintext description, I've gone with the above.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: