WIP on docs (#1)
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@ -4,15 +4,37 @@ include '../../start.php';
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$db = Data::getConnection();
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Security::verifyUser($db, redirectIfAnonymous: false);
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page_head('Refresh Feeds | Documentation'); ?>
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<h1>Refresh Feeds</h1>
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page_head('Feeds | Documentation'); ?>
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<h1>Feeds</h1>
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<p class=back-link><?=hx_get('./', '⟨⟨ Documentation Home')?>
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<article class=docs>
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<h2>Manual Feed Refresh</h2>
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<p>Next to the “Your Unread Items” heading on the main page, there is a link labeled “Refresh All
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Feeds”. Clicking this link will reload the main page once the feeds have been refreshed. Depending on the
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number and size of feeds, this may take a bit of time; each feed is refreshed individually.
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<h2>Automatic Refreshing</h2>
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<h2>Adding a Feed</h2>
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<p>On the top menu bar, click the <strong>Feeds</strong> link, then click the <strong>Add Feed</strong> button. In
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the field that is displayed, enter the
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<abbr title="Uniform Resource Locator (aka “link”)">URL</abbr> for the feed. Then click the
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<strong>Save</strong> button; if all goes well, the application will subscribe to the feed and pull in all its
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current items.
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<p>If you do not have the feed’s direct link, you can enter the URL for the site that hosts the feed. In most
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cases, the application should be able to find it and subscribe to it.
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<h2>Editing a Feed’s URL</h2>
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<p>If the feed to which you are subscribed has moved, you can edit the URL of the feed. In this case, the
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application will confirm that the new feed exists and will synchronize with its items. Depending on how the feed
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was moved, this may result in items reappearing as new; however, bookmarked items will not be removed, and older
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items will not be removed until they would otherwise have been pruned.
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<h2>Deleting a Feed</h2>
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<p>On the <strong>Feeds</strong> page, below each feed’s title, there is a <strong>Delete</strong> link at the
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end of the line. Once that is clicked, you will be prompted to confirm that you really mean to delete this feed;
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if you confirm the deletion, the feed and all its items (including bookmarked items) will be deleted.
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<h2>Refreshing Feeds</h2>
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<p>Feeds are pulled when their subscriptions are added; however, a one-time pull of feeds does not keep us up to
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date on future posts. From within the application, feeds can be updated manually; there is also a way to set up
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a job to regularly refresh feeds.
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<h3>Manual Refresh</h3>
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<p>Next to the “Your Unread Items” heading on the main page, there is a link labeled
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<strong>Refresh All Feeds</strong>. Clicking this link will reload the main page once the feeds have been
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refreshed. Depending on the number and size of feeds, this may take a bit of time; each feed is refreshed
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individually.
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<h3>Automatic Refresh Job <em>(Linux / Mac)</em></h3>
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<p>The <code>refresh</code> utility script will perform this refresh from the CLI. As it runs, it will list the
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feeds as it processes them, and if it encounters any errors, that is noted as well. This process can be
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automated via <code>cron</code> on Linux or Mac systems. This is most easily implemented by writing a small
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@ -7,11 +7,28 @@ Security::verifyUser($db, redirectIfAnonymous: false);
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page_head('Documentation'); ?>
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<h1>Documentation Home</h1>
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<article>
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<p><?=hx_get('./the-cli', 'About the CLI')?> provides orientation on Feed Reader Central’s command line
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interface
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<p><?=hx_get('./security-modes', 'Configuring Security Modes')?> describes the three security modes and how to
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manage each of them
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<p><?=hx_get('./refresh-feeds', 'Refresh Feeds')?> has instructions on how feeds can be refreshed on a schedule
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<h2>About the Application</h2>
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<p>This application is designed to be a lightweight, near-zero dependency application that individuals can run
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themselves. The idea that let to its creation was a desire to have a set of
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<abbr title="Really Simple Syndication">RSS</abbr> feeds which could be read from multiple devices on the same
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home network; for example, if an item was read from a laptop, it would not show up as new if the feed were read
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from a phone. The author had planned to write something similar when Google Reader shut down, and the
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combination of those two ideas led to the application you are looking at now.
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<h2>Installation</h2>
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<p><a href=https://git.bitbadger.solutions/bit-badger/feed-reader-central/src/branch/main/INSTALLING.md
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target=_blank rel=noopener>Steps to install this application</a> are found in the Feed Reader Central source
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code repository. It also describes some required configuration (mostly surrounding security modes; see the first
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feature below for all the details on that) and some optional ways to change the application's behavior.
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<h2>Usage</h2>
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<p><?=hx_get('./security-modes', 'Security Modes')?> – Feed Reader Central can be as secure as you require it
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to be. Learn about the modes available, their suitability for private networks or the open Internet, and how to
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manage users in a multi-user instance.
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<p><?=hx_get('./feeds', 'Feeds')?> – Without feeds, this application is just a bunch of near-empty pages;
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this page describes how to add and maintain feeds.
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<p><?=hx_get('./items', 'Items')?> – Read the items from feeds, bookmark them, search for text within them,
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and more.
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<p><?=hx_get('./the-cli', 'Command Line Interface')?> (CLI) – Feed Reader Central provides several functions
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that can be performed via its command line interface.
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</article><?php
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page_foot();
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$db->close();
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69
src/public/docs/items.php
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69
src/public/docs/items.php
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@ -0,0 +1,69 @@
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<?php
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include '../../start.php';
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$db = Data::getConnection();
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Security::verifyUser($db, redirectIfAnonymous: false);
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page_head('Items | Documentation'); ?>
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<h1>Items</h1>
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<p class=back-link><?=hx_get('./', '⟨⟨ Documentation Home')?>
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<article class=docs>
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<h2>Reading an Item</h2>
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<p>Before we look at all the different ways you can produce lists of items, we will take a quick look at how the
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item page works. Within a list of items, this page can be accessed via the title of the item.
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<ul>
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<li>The title of the items is a link to the item at its original source; it will open in a new tab.
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<li>The bookmark icon shows its current bookmark status; gray is not bookmarked, green is bookmarked. Clicking
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the icon will toggle the status for the item. If the current user has any bookmarked items, a
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<strong>Bookmarked</strong> item will appear in the top menu bar.
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<em>(The application usually does not replace the menu bar; clicking the
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<strong>Feed Reader Central</strong> link will reload it.)</em>
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<li>Below the title, the source, published date, and updated date (if applicable) are displayed.
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<li>The text of the item is displayed. Images are constrained to be no wider than the screen on which they are
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being viewed, but other embedded objects (YouTube videos, etc.) with specific sizes may end up overflowing.
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<em>(Web devs, if you have any ideas on how to constrain those as well, I'm all ears…)</em>
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<li>Below the text, there are three buttons. <strong>Done</strong> leaves the item marked as having been read,
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<strong>Keep as New</strong> will mark the item as unread, and <strong>Delete</strong> will delete the item
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from the database. Any of them will return you to wherever you were when you clicked the title of the item.
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</ul>
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<h2>Viewing Items for All Feeds</h2>
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<p>There are three different ways to view items across all your subscriptions.
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<h3>Unread Items</h3>
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<p>The main page of the application (after logging on, if required) displays all currently unread items across all
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subscribed feeds. The name of the feed is a link to view just that feed’s unread items.
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<h3>Bookmarked Items</h3>
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<p>If you have any bookmarked items, the <strong>Bookmarked</strong> link in the top menu bar will bring you to a
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list of all those items. The name of the feed is a link to view just that feed’s bookmarked items.
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<h3>Searching for Items</h3>
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<p>The <strong>Search</strong> link in the top menu bar presents a box where search text can be entered; you can
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also choose whether to search all items, or only those that have been bookmarked. The search applies to the
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content of each item. Within the search results, there is an indicator displayed if the item is unread or
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bookmarked, and the name of the feed is not linked.
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<p>Under the hood, this uses
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<a href=https://www.sqlite.org/fts5.html#full_text_query_syntax target=_blank rel=noopener>SQLite’s FTS5</a>,
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so it is case-insensitive by default and provides some interesting ways to query your items.
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<ul>
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<li><code>election</code> would return items with the word “election” in them.
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<li><code>senat*</code> would return items with words like “Senator”, “senatorial”, or
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“Senate” in them.
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<li><code>"election 2024"</code> <em>(note the quotes)</em> would return items that have the phrase
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“Election 2024” in them; <code>election 2024</code> would return items that have either
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“election” <em>or</em> “2024” in them.
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<li><code>election AND 2024</code> is the same as above; <code>AND</code> requires that both conditions be
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satisfied. (<code>OR</code> is also supported; both these must be uppercase.)
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<li><code>election NOT president*</code> would return items containing “election”, but only if they
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did <em>not</em> have words like “president” or “presidential”.
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</ul>
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<h2>Viewing Items by Feed</h2>
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<p>Other than the unread and bookmarked links mentioned above, lists of items by feed are linked on the
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<strong>Feeds</strong> page. Below each feed’s title, there are links for <strong>All</strong>,
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<strong>Unread</strong>, and <strong>Bookmarked</strong>, along with a count of items that fit the status.
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(If there are no items, the word is not linked.)
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<h2>A Note on Sorting</h2>
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<p>All lists of items are sorted by date, with the most recent items on top. Both the RSS and Atom specifications
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provide both a published date and an updated date. When selecting a date for sorting, the application uses the
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updated date if it is present; otherwise, it uses the published date. Some sites update their items more than
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others; if the items seem to move around in the list after a refresh, this is likely the cause.
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</article><?php
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page_foot();
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$db->close();
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