The following are problems that have not been resolved and will probably not be.
At times, you enter the tag as in [node:123 cck=title] and it is not converted by the filter.
There are 3 common reasons for this to append:
The 3rd one is certainly the most likely explanation once you made sure that the filter was effectively selected for that node. In many cases, it will be the missing ...
There is a Link Node project that can be used to generate a link to a node using the node title or another user specified title.
This is similar to using the following with Insert Node:
[node:<name> title=<my link>;]
If you want to include a view, use the insert_view module instead.
If you want to include blocks in your nodes (or other blocks, scary, hey?!), use the insert_block module instead.
If you know or have a similar project, please, feel free to post a comment below and I will add it to the list.
Thank ...
Although the accessibility of the node and comments are checked, it is a good idea to see this module as a security risk giving users a way to display nodes otherwise forbidden to them.
Because a lot of the data is used unfiltered, it is strongly suggest that you pay very close attention to the order of your filters. If you authorize this module to your users (i.e. where they can select an Input filter that includes this specific filter,) then look into checking the HTML code after this filter. Otherwise, a user could inject some unwanted HTML code1
If you have books and you are using the booktree module, then you can insert a book tree in another node using the Insert node module with the booktree parameter.
The book tree will start with the specified node.
See Also: Insert Node Parameter: cck (6-1.2)
IMPORTANT NOTE
This parameter is an extension that should be part of the booktree module and not of the Insert Node. It made not be supported in future versions (3.x, D7...)
The Insert Node module verifies that the user has permission to view that book tree. If not, nothing is output which means that the tag may instead generate ...
The CCK parameter let you insert one of your CCK field and some node fields that cannot otherwise be added without being themed.
We support CCK fields and several special field names as follow.
Fields that appeared after version 6-1.2 have a version specified between parenthesis (i.e. 6-1.3).
The CCK parameter must be followed by a field name. An empty name is likely to generate an error. The name of a field that does not exist is likely to generate nothing.
For instance, if you have a field named see_also, you would write:
cck=field_see_also;
Attach the comments at the bottom of the node data.
The comments will be shown just as in the regular page (i.e. flat, thread, expanded, collapsed.)
Note that this data is considered a [no content] because it does not affect the use of the "default" parameter. However, it definitively adds content to your output.
CSS Class: div.insert-node-comments
Theme: InsertNode_comments
IMPORTANT NOTES
The comments are appended to anything else that you have inserted. You cannot use the order of your parameters to put the comments in a different location. In order to do that, use multiple
Put the generated content inside a collapsible frame.
The frame is expanded at the start.
By default, the title of the node is used as the title of the frame. You can specify (since 6-1.2) the title as the value of the parameter:
collapsible=There is my other node;
See Also: Insert Node Parameter: collapsed (6-1.0) [no content]
WARNING
The version of the module for Drupal 5.x outputs the body whenever the collapsible parameter is used.
IMPORTANT NOTE
Note that the parameter value ends with a semi-colon! Do not include quotes unless you want to see them in the output. Yes. This means the
It is now possible (See #418004: Comments included --> Back after reply) to have Drupal send you back to the page that inserts the node instead of the inserted node. Say you create node A and B. You include node A inside node B. You are looking at node B now. You decide to add a comment on node A (that you see from within node B.) Click on the Add new comment link, write the comment and click Save. At that point, you probably want to come back to node B instead of node A.
This feature is only necessary if you have the links at the bottom of the node and allow comments to show up.
The ...
I changed the name of the module back to InsertNode (although I did not want to, I did not want to jeopardize the Drupal 5 version... which would probably have been fine, but well...)
So, the newer version of the D6 module is again called InsertNode.
To upgrade you will want to keep the other version running until you get the new version as the replacement (although you can manage your site the way you'd like this procedure let you switch from the previous version to the new version without having to turn off your site for a little while.)
Decompress the module in your sites/all/modules folder.
Go to admin/build/modules (Admin » Site Building » Modules) and select the new module (under package named "Filters input".)
Go to admin/settings/filters (Admin » Site Configuration » Input formats) and select the Insert node filter1.
Make sure that the text areas using the [node:...] tag make use of one of the formats having this Insert node filter ...