Drupal Modules

ratings

Ratings

AttributeAverage
Features5 / 5
Reliability5 / 5
Ease Of Use4 / 5
Documentation5 / 5
Vote Count3
averages
module overview

Module Overview

Drupal.org Excerpt:

The htmLawed module enables the use of the htmLawed (X)HTML filter/purifier with text/input formats. Two versions of the module are available. Unlike version 3, version 2 (available for Drupal 5 and 6) allows the use of different htmLawed filter-settings for teasers (including RSS newsfeed items), as... [More...]

Details:

Maintainer:alpha2zee
Links:
Categories:Content, Content display, Filters and editors, Security
downloads

Downloads

VersionDateFilesRelease notes
7.x-3.02011-May-22DownloadRecommended
6.x-3.12011-Sep-27DownloadRecommended
5.x-2.92011-Feb-21DownloadRecommended
6.x-2.112011-Sep-27DownloadOther
Total Downloads: 124 "Development" releases should be considered in beta.

reviews

Reviews

Options: Add a review

rating

Simple to use

The review by gamerxgirl is misleading. The module has 'default allowed tags' (same as Drupal's in-built HTM filter's) and one doesn't have to do anything extra. See the htmLawed module help-book page on the Drupal website -- http://drupal.org/node/255900.

rating

Too Complicated

I was looking for something much simpler that would read the default allowed tags per input format. However with this module you need to set the default tags again. It breaks things up into things much more complicated than they need to be.

I liked the idea that it would validate the tags, however I find that this module is too cumbersome for me and the simplicity I am looking for.

rating

Useful, within its niche.

This module is useful to me mainly because I'm a webdesigner and my site has a link to an XHTML validator to show off my standards-awareness. However, sometimes essential contrib modules can generate slightly less than perfect markup. This module doesn't completely guard your site against bad markup, but it does help clean up little spills here and there, and for me that makes the difference between getting the big orange warning or a green bar telling potential clients that I know what I'm doing. It's easy to use (you just enable it, the end.), and you don't really have to think about it once you've installed it.

Twitter


Sponsored By


iO1 Drupal Consultants

Top Drupal Books

  1. Using Drupal (O'Reilly)
  2. Definitive Guide to D7
  3. Beginning Drupal 7
  4. Drupal For Dummies
  5. Pro Drupal Development 7
Module Finder New Modules RSS Feeds