When OpenCms imports HTML files, it will (Web hosting services) attempt

December 21st, 2007

When OpenCms imports HTML files, it will attempt to retrieve the content from the body of the HTML file and save it as a Page type file. When displaying the file, OpenCms will apply a template. (See Chapter 3 for more on file types and templates.) The Template field on the Extended HTML Import form determines which template the imported pages will use. As mentioned above, the import tool will use a template when rendering the document, and the Element field determines where in the template the content will go. Most templates define an area called body (the default) or content. The Locale field determines the language for the imported HTML files. This language must already be one supported by OpenCms. You may need to download and install a particular language module to get the desired locale. The Input encoding field should be set to the character set used by the imported documents. The default, ISO-8859-1 (a.k.a. Latin-1), is the most common character set for English-language documents. The next two fields, Start regular expression pattern and End regular expression pattern (both optional) provide an advanced method of indicating where content begins and ends within an HTML document. By default, OpenCms will import what it finds in the body element in the HTML file. If the web pages have a complex layout, simply importing everything in the body element may create a significant editing task. To avoid importing unnecessary formatting, you can specify a regular expression (a short piece of code that searches for patterns in a document) to tell OpenCms what to consider as the beginning and the end of the content section. OpenCms uses the Jakarta ORO package to handle regular expressions. This library supports the well-documented Perl5 style of regular expressions. The Jakarta ORO package is an Open Source project maintained on the Apache Jakarta site: http://jakarta.apache.org/oro/index.html. The regular expression tools can be very useful when importing, but for our simple site, they are not necessary. The last field on the form is a checkbox called Overwrite files. When this box is checked, OpenCms will privilege the imported copy over files already in the VFS. If an imported file has the same name as another file in the destination folder, the imported file will overwrite the existing file. Unchecking this box will prevent imported files from overwriting existing files. Once the form is completed, you can click the Ok button to begin importing. OpenCms will show you progress information as it imports. Once the import is complete, you can click the Ok button again to return to the Database Management screen.
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The contents of an export are determined in (Web design service)

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