This method can be used to validate and filter input data and can be called via `Pico::getUrlParameter()` (URL GET parameters) and `Pico::getFormParameter()` (HTTP POST parameters). `Pico::filterVariable()` is basically a wrapper for PHP's `filter_var()` function with various compatibility extensions to allow theme developers to use its functionality in Twig templates. Therefore Pico 1.1 adds the `url_param` (`Pico::getUrlParameter()`) and `form_param` (`Pico::getFormParameter()`) Twig functions.
Resolves#305
\Symfony\Component\Yaml\Parser::parse() returns the unchanged value when a 1-liner string which is no valid YAML is passed. Assume this string to be the page title. Thus the following page will work now:
```
---
This is the title
---
# Example page
{{ meta.title }} is going to be "This is the title" - or "%meta.title%" == "This is the title".
```
This allows one to prevent Pico from removing the last "index" path component. Example use case: Pico's official admin plugin. We must distinguish between "content/sub.md" and "content/sub/index.md", otherwise it wouldn't be possible to edit both pages.
With Pico 1.0 you had to setup URL rewriting (e.g. using `mod_rewrite` on Apache) in a way that rewritten URLs follow the `QUERY_STRING` principles. Starting with version 1.1, Pico additionally supports the `REQUEST_URI` routing method, what allows you to simply rewrite all requests to just `index.php`. Pico then reads the requested page from the `REQUEST_URI` environment variable provided by the webserver. Please note that `QUERY_STRING` takes precedence over `REQUEST_URI`.
Symfony YAML interprets ISO-8601 datetime strings and returns timestamps instead of the string. This behavior conforms to the YAML standard, i.e. this is no bug of Symfony YAML.
Fixes#336. Thanks @csholmq for reporting this.
Resolves#330
After loading the `config/config.php`, Pico proceeds with any existing `config/*.config.php` in alphabetical order. The file order is crucial: Config values which has been set already, cannot be overwritten by a succeeding file. This is also true for arrays, i.e. when specifying `$config['test'] = array('foo' => 'bar')` in `config/a.config.php` and `$config['test'] = array('baz' => 42)` in `config/b.config.php`, `$config['test']['baz']` will be undefined