
http://example.com/foo/bar
)'),
'proto-rel' => t('Protocol relative URL (//example.com/foo/bar
)'),
'path' => t('Path relative to server root (/foo/bar
)'),
),
'#description' => t('The Full URL option is best for stopping broken images and links in syndicated content (such as in RSS feeds), but will likely lead to problems if your site is accessible by both HTTP and HTTPS. Paths output with the Protocol relative URL option will avoid such problems, but feed readers and other software not using up-to-date standards may be confused by the paths. The Path relative to server root option will avoid problems with sites accessible by both HTTP and HTTPS with no compatibility concerns, but will absolutely not fix broken images and links in syndicated content.'),
'#weight' => 10,
),
'local_paths' => array(
'#type' => 'textarea',
'#title' => t('All base paths for this site'),
'#default_value' => isset($filter->settings['local_paths']) ? $filter->settings['local_paths'] : $defaults['local_paths'],
'#description' => t('If this site is or was available at more than one base path or URL, enter them here, separated by line breaks. For example, if this site is live at http://example.com/
but has a staging version at http://dev.example.org/staging/
, you would enter both those URLs here. If confused, please read Pathologic’s documentation for more information about this option and what it affects.', array('!docs' => 'http://drupal.org/node/257026')),
'#weight' => 20,
),
);
}
/**
* Pathologic filter callback.
*
* Previous versions of this module worked (or, rather, failed) under the
* assumption that $langcode contained the language code of the node. Sadly,
* this isn't the case.
* @see http://drupal.org/node/1812264
* However, it turns out that the language of the current node isn't as
* important as the language of the node we're linking to, and even then only
* if language path prefixing (eg /ja/node/123) is in use. REMEMBER THIS IN THE
* FUTURE, ALBRIGHT.
*
* The below code uses the @ operator before parse_url() calls because in PHP
* 5.3.2 and earlier, parse_url() causes a warning of parsing fails. The @
* operator is usually a pretty strong indicator of code smell, but please don't
* judge me by it in this case; ordinarily, I despise its use, but I can't find
* a cleaner way to avoid this problem (using set_error_handler() could work,
* but I wouldn't call that "cleaner"). Fortunately, Drupal 8 will require at
* least PHP 5.3.5, so this mess doesn't have to spread into the D8 branch of
* Pathologic.
* @see https://drupal.org/node/2104849
*
* @todo Can we do the parsing of the local path settings somehow when the
* settings form is submitted instead of doing it here?
*/
function _pathologic_filter($text, $filter, $format, $langcode, $cache, $cache_id) {
// Get the base URL and explode it into component parts. We add these parts
// to the exploded local paths settings later.
global $base_url;
$base_url_parts = @parse_url($base_url . '/');
// Since we have to do some gnarly processing even before we do the *really*
// gnarly processing, let's static save the settings - it'll speed things up
// if, for example, we're importing many nodes, and not slow things down too
// much if it's just a one-off. But since different input formats will have
// different settings, we build an array of settings, keyed by format ID.
$cached_settings = &drupal_static(__FUNCTION__, array());
if (!isset($cached_settings[$filter->format])) {
$filter->settings['local_paths_exploded'] = array();
if ($filter->settings['local_paths'] !== '') {
// Build an array of the exploded local paths for this format's settings.
// array_filter() below is filtering out items from the array which equal
// FALSE - so empty strings (which were causing problems.
// @see http://drupal.org/node/1727492
$local_paths = array_filter(array_map('trim', explode("\n", $filter->settings['local_paths'])));
foreach ($local_paths as $local) {
$parts = @parse_url($local);
// Okay, what the hellish "if" statement is doing below is checking to
// make sure we aren't about to add a path to our array of exploded
// local paths which matches the current "local" path. We consider it
// not a match, if…
// @todo: This is pretty horrible. Can this be simplified?
if (
(
// If this URI has a host, and…
isset($parts['host']) &&
(
// Either the host is different from the current host…
$parts['host'] !== $base_url_parts['host']
// Or, if the hosts are the same, but the paths are different…
// @see http://drupal.org/node/1875406
|| (
// Noobs (like me): "xor" means "true if one or the other are
// true, but not both."
(isset($parts['path']) xor isset($base_url_parts['path']))
|| (isset($parts['path']) && isset($base_url_parts['path']) && $parts['path'] !== $base_url_parts['path'])
)
)
) ||
// Or…
(
// The URI doesn't have a host…
!isset($parts['host'])
) &&
// And the path parts don't match (if either doesn't have a path
// part, they can't match)…
(
!isset($parts['path']) ||
!isset($base_url_parts['path']) ||
$parts['path'] !== $base_url_parts['path']
)
) {
// Add it to the list.
$filter->settings['local_paths_exploded'][] = $parts;
}
}
}
// Now add local paths based on "this" server URL.
$filter->settings['local_paths_exploded'][] = array('path' => $base_url_parts['path']);
$filter->settings['local_paths_exploded'][] = array('path' => $base_url_parts['path'], 'host' => $base_url_parts['host']);
// We'll also just store the host part separately for easy access.
$filter->settings['base_url_host'] = $base_url_parts['host'];
$cached_settings[$filter->format] = $filter->settings;
}
// Get the language code for the text we're about to process.
$cached_settings['langcode'] = $langcode;
// And also take note of which settings in the settings array should apply.
$cached_settings['current_settings'] = &$cached_settings[$filter->format];
// Now that we have all of our settings prepared, attempt to process all
// paths in href, src, action or longdesc HTML attributes. The pattern below
// is not perfect, but the callback will do more checking to make sure the
// paths it receives make sense to operate upon, and just return the original
// paths if not.
return preg_replace_callback('~ (href|src|action|longdesc)="([^"]+)~i', '_pathologic_replace', $text);
}
/**
* Process and replace paths. preg_replace_callback() callback.
*/
function _pathologic_replace($matches) {
// Get the base path.
global $base_path;
// Get the settings for the filter. Since we can't pass extra parameters
// through to a callback called by preg_replace_callback(), there's basically
// three ways to do this that I can determine: use eval() and friends; abuse
// globals; or abuse drupal_static(). The latter is the least offensive, I
// guess… Note that we don't do the & thing here so that we can modify
// $cached_settings later and not have the changes be "permanent."
$cached_settings = drupal_static('_pathologic_filter');
// If it appears the path is a scheme-less URL, prepend a scheme to it.
// parse_url() cannot properly parse scheme-less URLs. Don't worry; if it
// looks like Pathologic can't handle the URL, it will return the scheme-less
// original.
// @see https://drupal.org/node/1617944
// @see https://drupal.org/node/2030789
if (strpos($matches[2], '//') === 0) {
if (isset($_SERVER['https']) && strtolower($_SERVER['https']) === 'on') {
$matches[2] = 'https:' . $matches[2];
}
else {
$matches[2] = 'http:' . $matches[2];
}
}
// Now parse the URL after reverting HTML character encoding.
// @see http://drupal.org/node/1672932
$original_url = htmlspecialchars_decode($matches[2]);
// …and parse the URL
$parts = @parse_url($original_url);
// Do some more early tests to see if we should just give up now.
if (
// If parse_url() failed, give up.
$parts === FALSE
|| (
// If there's a scheme part and it doesn't look useful, bail out.
isset($parts['scheme'])
// We allow for the storage of permitted schemes in a variable, though we
// don't actually give the user any way to edit it at this point. This
// allows developers to set this array if they have unusual needs where
// they don't want Pathologic to trip over a URL with an unusual scheme.
// @see http://drupal.org/node/1834308
// "files" and "internal" are for Path Filter compatibility.
&& !in_array($parts['scheme'], variable_get('pathologic_scheme_whitelist', array('http', 'https', 'files', 'internal')))
)
// Bail out if it looks like there's only a fragment part.
|| (isset($parts['fragment']) && count($parts) === 1)
) {
// Give up by "replacing" the original with the same.
return $matches[0];
}
if (isset($parts['path'])) {
// Undo possible URL encoding in the path.
// @see http://drupal.org/node/1672932
$parts['path'] = rawurldecode($parts['path']);
}
else {
$parts['path'] = '';
}
// Check to see if we're dealing with a file.
// @todo Should we still try to do path correction on these files too?
if (isset($parts['scheme']) && $parts['scheme'] === 'files') {
// Path Filter "files:" support. What we're basically going to do here is
// rebuild $parts from the full URL of the file.
$new_parts = @parse_url(file_create_url(file_default_scheme() . '://' . $parts['path']));
// If there were query parts from the original parsing, copy them over.
if (!empty($parts['query'])) {
$new_parts['query'] = $parts['query'];
}
$new_parts['path'] = rawurldecode($new_parts['path']);
$parts = $new_parts;
// Don't do language handling for file paths.
$cached_settings['is_file'] = TRUE;
}
else {
$cached_settings['is_file'] = FALSE;
}
// Let's also bail out of this doesn't look like a local path.
$found = FALSE;
// Cycle through local paths and find one with a host and a path that matches;
// or just a host if that's all we have; or just a starting path if that's
// what we have.
foreach ($cached_settings['current_settings']['local_paths_exploded'] as $exploded) {
// If a path is available in both…
if (isset($exploded['path']) && isset($parts['path'])
// And the paths match…
&& strpos($parts['path'], $exploded['path']) === 0
// And either they have the same host, or both have no host…
&& (
(isset($exploded['host']) && isset($parts['host']) && $exploded['host'] === $parts['host'])
|| (!isset($exploded['host']) && !isset($parts['host']))
)
) {
// Remove the shared path from the path. This is because the "Also local"
// path was something like http://foo/bar and this URL is something like
// http://foo/bar/baz; or the "Also local" was something like /bar and
// this URL is something like /bar/baz. And we only care about the /baz
// part.
$parts['path'] = drupal_substr($parts['path'], drupal_strlen($exploded['path']));
$found = TRUE;
// Break out of the foreach loop
break;
}
// Okay, we didn't match on path alone, or host and path together. Can we
// match on just host? Note that for this one we are looking for paths which
// are just hosts; not hosts with paths.
elseif ((isset($parts['host']) && !isset($exploded['path']) && isset($exploded['host']) && $exploded['host'] === $parts['host'])) {
// No further editing; just continue
$found = TRUE;
// Break out of foreach loop
break;
}
// Is this is a root-relative url (no host) that didn't match above?
// Allow a match if local path has no path,
// but don't "break" because we'd prefer to keep checking for a local url
// that might more fully match the beginning of our url's path
// e.g.: if our url is /foo/bar we'll mark this as a match for
// http://example.com but want to keep searching and would prefer a match
// to http://example.com/foo if that's configured as a local path
elseif (!isset($parts['host']) && (!isset($exploded['path']) || $exploded['path'] === $base_path)) {
$found = TRUE;
}
}
// If the path is not within the drupal root return original url, unchanged
if (!$found) {
return $matches[0];
}
// Okay, format the URL.
// If there's still a slash lingering at the start of the path, chop it off.
$parts['path'] = ltrim($parts['path'],'/');
// Examine the query part of the URL. Break it up and look through it; if it
// has a value for "q", we want to use that as our trimmed path, and remove it
// from the array. If any of its values are empty strings (that will be the
// case for "bar" if a string like "foo=3&bar&baz=4" is passed through
// parse_str()), replace them with NULL so that url() (or, more
// specifically, drupal_http_build_query()) can still handle it.
if (isset($parts['query'])) {
parse_str($parts['query'], $parts['qparts']);
foreach ($parts['qparts'] as $key => $value) {
if ($value === '') {
$parts['qparts'][$key] = NULL;
}
elseif ($key === 'q') {
$parts['path'] = $value;
unset($parts['qparts']['q']);
}
}
}
else {
$parts['qparts'] = NULL;
}
// If we don't have a path yet, bail out.
if (!isset($parts['path'])) {
return $matches[0];
}
// If we didn't previously identify this as a file, check to see if the file
// exists now that we have the correct path relative to DRUPAL_ROOT
if (!$cached_settings['is_file']) {
$cached_settings['is_file'] = !empty($parts['path']) && is_file(DRUPAL_ROOT . '/'. $parts['path']);
}
// Okay, deal with language stuff.
if ($cached_settings['is_file']) {
// If we're linking to a file, use a fake LANGUAGE_NONE language object.
// Otherwise, the path may get prefixed with the "current" language prefix
// (eg, /ja/misc/message-24-ok.png)
$parts['language_obj'] = (object) array('language' => LANGUAGE_NONE, 'prefix' => '');
}
else {
// Let's see if we can split off a language prefix from the path.
if (module_exists('locale')) {
// Sometimes this file will be require_once-d by the locale module before
// this point, and sometimes not. We require_once it ourselves to be sure.
require_once DRUPAL_ROOT . '/includes/language.inc';
list($language_obj, $path) = language_url_split_prefix($parts['path'], language_list());
if ($language_obj) {
$parts['path'] = $path;
$parts['language_obj'] = $language_obj;
}
}
}
// If we get to this point and $parts['path'] is now an empty string (which
// will be the case if the path was originally just "/"), then we
// want to link to La destacada escritora italiana Melania G. Mazzucco, invitada especial al Hay Festival de Cartagena, visitará Bogotá y dictará una única conferencia en el auditorio de la Fundación Gilberto Alzate Avendaño que ella misma tituló Vida, vidas, memoria, leyenda. Una escritora y sus historias, el próximo lunes 3 de febrero de 2014, a las 6:00 p.m. La entrada es libre.
La escritora explica el sentido de este título y de los temas que desarrollará en su conferencia:
“En la palabra “Vida”, que también es el título en español de una de mis novelas, y en la palabra “vidas” hay una síntesis de la materia de mis narraciones, de mi forma de escribir y de narrar la vida”.
“El discurso sobre la memoria y sobre la leyenda tienen que ver con la elección de escribir dentro del género narrativo y de hacer de la vida, novela, y de la novela, vida”.
Mazzucco iniciará su charla hablando de la emigración. “Ese también es un modo de presentarme a mí misma (y a Italia) para quienes no me conocen y no la conocen. La emigración a América forma parte de la historia de mi familia y es el tema central de mi novela Vida. Además, hablar de emigración también me permite hablar de la Italia contemporánea en donde, desde los años noventa, se ha presentado una gran inmigración que ha cambiado el rostro y la historia de la nación”.
“Mi escritura es realista o hiperrealista. Otras novelas como Un día perfecto, Limbo y Eres como eres están ambientadas en nuestra época. Entre los temas tratados están: la violencia contra las mujeres (el feminicidio), la guerra en Afganistán, las nuevas familias, etc.”, explica la escritora.
Finalmente, la novelista describirá su relación con la pintura, las artes plásticas, la radio, el teatro y el cine. “Mi relación con las artes visuales, de hecho, no se limita al cine. Escribo sobre arte en el sentido de que el arte es el centro de gran parte de mi escritura (como en la novela La larga espera del Ángel, o en otros ensayos que he escrito), y a través de otras acciones como las que desarrollé en 2013 como curadora para el periódico La República de la serie “El Museo del Mundo”, dedicada a la lectura de cuadros que se ubican entre el arte moderno y contemporáneo. Para dar un ejemplo, desde Giotto hasta Goya, desde Caravaggio hasta Velásquez. He tratado de inventar una nueva forma (no académica, no periodística, ni solamente literaria) para narrar el arte”.
El evento es posible gracias a la Oficina Cultural de la Embajada de Italia.
Nació en Roma en 1966. Su debut en la narrativa se da con la obra El beso de la Medusa (1996) seguida de La habitación de Baltus (1998). Del año 2000 es el trabajo Ella, tan amada, novela dedicada a la escritora suiza Annemarie Schwarzenbach y con la cual se le otorgó el Premio Nápoles.
Con Vida (2003) ha reinventado en clave picaresca y fantástica la historia de la emigración en América de su familia. La novela ganó el Premio Strega y el Premio internacional Arzobispo Juan de San Clemente por mejor novela extranjera publicada en España en el 2004-2005. Además, fue nominada al Globe & Mail Book of the Year 2005 y ha sido incluida entre los Editors' Choice del New York Times Book Review y entre los Top Ten Books of the Year del Publishers Weekly (única novela no escrita en lengua inglesa).
En el 2005 publicó Un día perfecto, libro del cual es tomada la película homónima de Ferzan Ozpetek. Estudiosa y apasionada de arte, le dedicó al pintor veneciano Tintoretto la novela La larga espera del ángel (2008, Premio Bagutta, Premio Escanno, Premio Bibliotecas de Roma) y la monumental biografía de Jacomo Tintoretto y sus hijos titulada Historia de una familia veneciana (2009, Premio Benedetto Croce, Premio Luigi Russo, Premio Palmi, Premio Comisso). En febrero de 2012 escribió un ensayo biográfico y los textos de sala para la gran exhibición sobre Tintoretto preparada para la galería Escudería del Quirinale.
En el 2012 publicó Limbo (Premio Elsa Morante, Premio Rhegium Julii, Premio Matteotti, Premio Bottari Lattes Grinzane) y El Dachshund y la Reina (Premio Frignano Ragazzi), cuento de Navidad ilustrado por Alessandro Sanna. Su más reciente novela, Eres como eres, fue publicada por la Editorial Einaudi Estilo Libre en octubre de 2013. Ganadora del Premio literario Viareggio-Tobino 2011 y del Premio Ignazio Silone 2013, la obra de Melania G. Mazzucco ha sido traducida en 24 países.
Además, la novelista italiana ha escrito para el cine, el teatro y la radio, consiguiendo reconocimientos internacionales. Ha publicado artículos, reportajes y cuentos en numerosos periódicos (la Repubblica, Il Sole 24 ore, Corriere della Sera, Il Manifesto, Il Messaggero, Nuovi Argomenti) y es invitada con regularidad a tener conferencias en las mayores universidades italianas y extranjeras.
En el 2013 escribió una columna dominical en el periódico la Repubblica, sobre las grandes obras maestras del arte para la serie “El museo del mundo”.