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[[!meta robots="noindex, follow"]]
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To select a set of pages, such as pages that are locked, pages
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whose commit emails you want subscribe to, or pages to combine into a
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blog, the wiki uses a PageSpec. This is an expression that matches
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a set of pages.
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The simplest PageSpec is a simple list of pages. For example, this matches
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any of the three listed pages:
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foo or bar or baz
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More often you will want to match any pages that have a particular thing in
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their name. You can do this using a glob pattern. "`*`" stands for any part
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of a page name, and "`?`" for any single letter of a page name. So this
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matches all pages about music, and any [[SubPage]]s of the SandBox, but does
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not match the SandBox itself:
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*music* or SandBox/*
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You can also prefix an item with "`!`" to skip pages that match it. So to
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match all pages except for Discussion pages and the SandBox:
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* and !SandBox and !*/Discussion
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Some more elaborate limits can be added to what matches using these functions:
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* "`glob(someglob)`" - matches pages and other files that match the given glob.
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Just writing the glob by itself is actually a shorthand for this function.
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* "`page(glob)`" - like `glob()`, but only matches pages, not other files
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* "`link(page)`" - matches only pages that link to a given page (or glob)
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* "`tagged(tag)`" - matches pages that are tagged or link to the given tag (or
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tags matched by a glob)
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* "`backlink(page)`" - matches only pages that a given page links to
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* "`creation_month(month)`" - matches only files created on the given month
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number
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* "`creation_day(mday)`" - or day of the month
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* "`creation_year(year)`" - or year
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* "`created_after(page)`" - matches only files created after the given page
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was created
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* "`created_before(page)`" - matches only files created before the given page
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was created
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* "`internal(glob)`" - like `glob()`, but matches even internal-use
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pages that globs do not usually match.
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* "`title(glob)`", "`author(glob)`", "`authorurl(glob)`",
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"`license(glob)`", "`copyright(glob)`", "`guid(glob)`"
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- match pages that have the given metadata, matching the specified glob.
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* "`user(username)`" - tests whether a modification is being made by a
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user with the specified username. If openid is enabled, an openid can also
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be put here. Glob patterns can be used in the username. For example,
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to match all openid users, use `user(*://*)`
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* "`admin()`" - tests whether a modification is being made by one of the
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wiki admins.
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* "`ip(address)`" - tests whether a modification is being made from the
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specified IP address. Glob patterns can be used in the address. For
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example, `ip(127.0.0.*)`
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* "`comment(glob)`" - matches comments to a page matching the glob.
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* "`comment_pending(glob)`" - matches unmoderated, pending comments.
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* "`postcomment(glob)`" - matches only when comments are being
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posted to a page matching the specified glob
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For example, to match all pages in a blog that link to the page about music
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and were written in 2005:
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blog/* and link(music) and creation_year(2005)
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Note the use of "and" in the above example, that means that only pages that
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match each of the three expressions match the whole. Use "and" when you
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want to combine expression like that; "or" when it's enough for a page to
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match one expression. Note that it doesn't make sense to say "index and
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SandBox", since no page can match both expressions.
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More complex expressions can also be created, by using parentheses for
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grouping. For example, to match pages in a blog that are tagged with either
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of two tags, use:
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blog/* and (tagged(foo) or tagged(bar))
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Note that page names in PageSpecs are matched against the absolute
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filenames of the pages in the wiki, so a pagespec "foo" used on page
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"a/b" will not match a page named "a/foo" or "a/b/foo". To match
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relative to the directory of the page containing the pagespec, you can
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use "./". For example, "./foo" on page "a/b" matches page "a/foo".
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To indicate the name of the page the PageSpec is used in, you can
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use a single dot. For example, `link(.)` matches all the pages
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linking to the page containing the PageSpec.
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