Configure the Rich Text Editor configure-the-rich-text-editor

The Rich Text Editor (RTE) provides authors with a wide range of functionality for editing their text content. Icons, selection boxes, toolbar, and menus are provided for a WYSIWYG text-editing experience.

To know how to use RTE features for authoring, see Use Rich Text Editor for authoring. RTE can be configured to enable, disable, and extend the features available in the authoring components. The following workflow illustrates a recommended order of completing the RTE configuration tasks in Experience Manager.

Sequence of steps to learn how to configure RTE

Figure: Sequence of steps to learn how to configure RTE

Understand Touch-enabled UI and Classic UI understand-touch-enabled-ui-and-classic-ui

The Touch-enabled UI is the standard user interface for Experience Manager. Adobe introduced Touch-enabled UI with responsive design for authoring environment. The Touch-enabled UI is designed for touch and desktop devices. The interface differs considerably from the original Classic UI.

Rich Text Editor toolbar in Touch-enabled user interface

Figure: Rich Text Editor toolbar in Touch-enabled UI

Rich Text Editor toolbar in Classic UI

Figure: Rich Text Editor toolbar in Classic UI

Various modes of editing editingmodes

Authors can create and edit textual content in Experience Manager using the different modes of components. The toolbar options for authoring and formatting content and the user experience of RTE-enabled components in different editing mode varies based on RTE configurations.

Editing mode
Editing area
Recommended features to be enabled
Touch UI
Classic UI
Inline
In-place editing for quick, minor edits; Format without opening a dialog box
Minimal RTE features
Y
Y
RTE full screen
Covers entire page
All the required RTE features
Y
N
Dialog
Dialog box on top of the page content but does not cover the entire page
All the required RTE features in Classic UI; judiciously enable features in Touch UI
Y
Y
Dialog full screen
Same as Full screen mode; contains fields of the dialog alongside RTE
All the required RTE features
Y
N
NOTE
The source-edit feature is not available in inline editing mode in Touch-enabled UI. You cannot drag images in the full screen mode. All other features work in all the modes.

Inline editing inline-editing

When opened (with a slow double-click) the content can be edited within the page. A compact toolbar with very basic options is presented.

Inline editing with basic toolbar in Touch-enabled UI

Figure: Inline editing with basic toolbar in Touch-enabled UI

In Classic UI, a slow double-click the component allows inline editing and an orange outline highlights the content. If the Content Finder is open, a toolbar with the available RTE formatting options is displayed at the top of the window. If the Content Finder is not open, the formatting options are not displayed and you can do basic text edits only.

Full screen editing full-screen-editing

Experience Manager components can be opened in full screen view that hides the page content and occupies the available screen. Consider full screen editing a detailed version of the inline editing as it offers the most editing options. It can be opened by clicking rte_fullscreen , from the compact toolbar when using the inline editing mode.

In the dialog full screen mode, along with a detailed RTE toolbar, the options and components available in a dialog are also available. It is applicable only for a dialog that contains RTE alongside other components.

The detailed RTE toolbar when editing in full screen mode in Touch-enabled UI

Figure: The detailed RTE toolbar when editing in full screen mode in Touch-enabled UI

Dialog editing dialog-editing

When a component is double-clicked a dialog box opens for editing the contents. The dialog box opens on top of the existing page. In some specific scenarios, the dialog opens as a pop-up window. For example, when a Text component is part of a column in a multi-column page layout and the area available for the dialog is less.

Dialog editing mode in Touch-enabled UI

Figure: Dialog editing mode in Touch-enabled UI

Dialog box in Classic UI that contains detailed toolbar for editing

Figure: Dialog box in Classic UI that contains detailed toolbar for editing

About RTE plug-ins and the associated features aboutplugins

The functionality is made available via a series of plug-ins, each with:

  • A features property:

    • Used to activate, or deactivate, basic functionality for that plug-in
    • That can be configured using a standardized procedure
  • Where appropriate, additional properties and options requiring specialized configuration.

Basic features of the RTE are activated, or deactivated, by the value of the features property on a node specific to the appropriate plug-in.

The following table lists the current plug-ins, showing:

  • Plug-in IDs with a link to API documentation. ID is used as the node name when activating a plug-in.
  • Permitted values for the features property.
  • A description of the functionality provided by the plug-in.
Plug-in ID
features
Description
edit
cut copy paste-default paste-plaintext paste-wordhtml
Cut, copy and, the three paste modes.
findreplace
find replace
Find and replace.
format
bold italic underline
Basic text formatting.
image
image
Basic image support (drag from content or Content Finder). Depending on the browser, the support has different behaviors for authors
keys
To define this value, see tab size.
justify
justifyleft justifycenter justifyright
Paragraph alignment.
links
modifylink unlink anchor
Hyperlinks and anchors.
lists
ordered unordered indent outdent
This plug-in controls both indentation and lists; including nested lists.
misctools
specialchars sourceedit
Miscellaneous tools allow authors to enter special characters or edit the HTML source. Also, you can add a whole range of special characters if you want to define your own list.
Paraformat
paraformat
The default paragraph formats are Paragraph, Heading 1, Heading 2, and Heading 3 (<p>, <h1>, <h2>, and <h3>). You can add more paragraph formats or extend the list.
spellcheck
checktext
Language aware spell checker.
styles
styles
Support for styling using a CSS class. Add new text styles if you want to add (or extend) your own range of styles for use with text.
subsuperscript
subscript superscript
Extensions to the basic formats, adding sub- and super-script.
table
table removetable insertrow removerow insertcolumn removecolumn cellprops mergecells splitcell selectrow selectcolumns
See configure table styles, if you want to add your own styles for either entire tables or individual cells.
undo
undo redo
History size of undo and redo operations.
NOTE
The full screen plug-in is not supported in dialog mode. Use of the dialogFullScreen setting to configure the toolbar for full screen mode.

Understand the configuration paths and locations understand-the-configuration-paths-and-locations

The mode of RTE editing (and the UI) that you provide for your authors decide the location for the configuration details when you are activating the RTE plug-ins:

Editing mode
Location for Touch UI
Location for Classic UI
Inline
cq:editConfig/cq:inplaceEditing
cq:editConfig/cq:inplaceEditing
Full screen
cq:editConfig/cq:inplaceEditing
Not applicable
Dialog
cq:dialog
dialog
Full screen dialog
cq:dialog
Not applicable
NOTE
Do not name the node under cq:inplaceEditing as config. On cq:inplaceEditing node, define the following properties:
  • Name: configPath
  • Type: String
  • Value: path of the node containing the actual configuration
Do not name the RTE configuration node as config. Otherwise, the RTE configurations take effect for only the administrators and not for the users in the group content-author.

Configure the following properties that apply in Dialog editing mode in Touch UI only:

  • useFixedInlineToolbar: Set this Boolean property defined on the RTE node (one with sling:resourceType= cq/gui/components/authoring/dialog/richtext) to True, to make RTE toolbar fixed instead of floating.

    When this property is true, Richtext editing is, by default, started on the “foundation-contentloaded” event.

    To prevent this, set the property customStart to Trueand trigger the ‘rte-start’ event to start RTE editing. When this property is ‘true’, the default behavior, rte start on click, does not work.

  • customStart: Set this Boolean property defined on the RTE node to True, to control when to start RTE by triggering the event rte-start.

  • rte-start: Trigger this event on the contenteditable-div of RTE, when to start editing RTE. This works only if customStart has been set to true.

When RTE is used in the touch-enabled dialog, setting the property useFixedInlineToolbar to true is mandatory to avoid issues.

Customizing in place editing customizing-in-place-editing

You can define on which HTML selector the text editor starts by configuring the following properties:

  • editElementQuery - Defined on cq:InplaceEditingConfig, this property is used to specify a selector of the HTML element on which the inline-editing for the Text Component will be started. If not specified, the inline-editing is directly started on the Text Component HTML.
  • textPropertyName - Defined on cq:InplaceEditingConfig, this property is used to specify the name of the property that will be saved on the content node where the HTML value of the text component will be persisted after inline-editing.

The corresponding property for dialog mode is name.

Enable RTE functionalities by activating plug-ins enable-rte-functionalities-by-activating-plug-ins

RTE functionalities are made available via a series of plug-ins, each with features property. You can configure the features property to enable or disable the various features of each plug-in.

For detailed configurations of the RTE plug-ins, see how to activate and configure the RTE plug-ins.

Sample: Download this sample configuration that illustrates how to configure RTE. In this package all the features are enabled.

NOTE
The Core Components text component allows template editors to configure many RTE plugins in a GUI as content policies, eliminating the need for technical configuration. Content policies can work with RTE UI configurations as described in this document.
For more information, see the RTE UI settings and content polices section of this document and Creating Page Templates and the Core Components developer documentation.
NOTE
For reference purposes, the default Text components (delivered as part of a standard installation) can be found at:
  • /libs/wcm/foundation/components/text
  • /libs/foundation/components/text
To create your own text component, copy the above component instead of editing these components.

Configure RTE toolbar dialogfullscreen

AEM lets you configure the interface for the Rich Text Editor differently for the different editing modes. The default settings are provided below. You can override these defaults based on your requirements. You customize only the toolbar features that you want to provide to your authors. You do not need to specify all the toolbar configurations.

To configure the toolbar for dialogFullScreen, use the following sample configuration.

<uiSettings jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
  <cui jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
    <inline
      jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
      toolbar="[format#bold,format#italic,format#underline,#justify,#lists,links#modifylink,links#unlink,#paraformat]">
      <popovers jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
        <justify
          jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
          items="[justify#justifyleft,justify#justifycenter,justify#justifyright,justify#justifyjustify]"
          ref="justify"/>
        <lists
          jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
          items="[lists#unordered,lists#ordered,lists#outdent,lists#indent]"
          ref="lists"/>
        <paraformat
          jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
          items="paraformat:getFormats:paraformat-pulldown"
          ref="paraformat"/>
      </popovers>
    </inline>
    <dialogFullScreen
      jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
      toolbar="[format#bold,format#italic,format#underline,justify#justifyleft,justify#justifycenter,justify#justifyright,justify#justifyjustify,lists#unordered,lists#ordered,lists#outdent,lists#indent,links#modifylink,links#unlink,table#createoredit,#paraformat,image#imageProps]">
      <popovers jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
        <paraformat
          jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
          items="paraformat:getFormats:paraformat-pulldown"
          ref="paraformat"/>
      </popovers>
    </dialogFullScreen>
    <tableEditOptions
      jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
      toolbar="[table#insertcolumn-before,table#insertcolumn-after,table#removecolumn,-,table#insertrow-before,table#insertrow-after,table#removerow,-,table#mergecells-right,table#mergecells-down,table#mergecells,table#splitcell-horizontal,table#splitcell-vertical,-,table#selectrow,table#selectcolumn,-,table#ensureparagraph,-,table#modifytableandcell,table#removetable,-,undo#undo,undo#redo,-,table#exitTableEditing,-]">
    </tableEditOptions>
  </cui>
</uiSettings>

Different UI settings are used for the inline mode and full screen mode. The toolbar property is used to specify the buttons of the toolbar.

For example, if the button is itself a feature (for example, Bold), it is specified as PluginName#FeatureName (for example, links#modifylink).

If the button is a popover (containing some features of a plug-in), it is specified as #PluginName (for example, #format).

Separators (|) between a group of buttons can be specified with -.

The pop-up node under inline or full-screen mode contains a list of the popovers being used. Each child node under the ‘popovers’ node is named after the plug-in (for example, format). It has a property ‘items’ containing a list of features of the plug-in (for example, format#bold).

RTE user interface settings and content policies rtecontentpolicies

Administrators can control the RTE options using content policies, say instead of doing the configuration as described above. Content policies define the design properties of a component when used as part of an editable template. For example, if a text component that uses the RTE is used with an editable template, the content policy can define that the bold option be available and a few paragraph formatting options be available. Content policies are reusable and can be applied across multiple templates.

The available options in the RTE flow downstream from the user interface configurations to the content policies.

  • User interface configuration settings define which options are available to the content policies.
  • If the user interface configuration of the RTE removed or does not enable an item, the content policy cannot configure it.
  • An author has access to only such functionality as is made available by the user interface configurations and the content policies.

As an example, you can see the Text Core Component documentation.

Customize mapping between toolbar icons and commands iconstoolbar

You can customize the mapping between Coral icons displayed on the RTE toolbar and the available commands. You cannot use any other icons besides Coral icons.

  1. Create a node named icons under uiSettings/cui.

  2. Create nodes for individual icons under it.

  3. On each of the individual icon nodes, specify a Coral icon and a command to map to the icon.

Below is a sample snippet to map the command Bold to the Coral icon named textItalic.

<text jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured" sling:resourceType="cq/gui/components/authoring/dialog/richtext" name="./text" useFixedInlineToolbar="{Boolean}true">
    <rtePlugins jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
        <format jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured" features="bold,italic"/>
    </rtePlugins>
    <uiSettings jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
        <cui jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
            <inline jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
                toolbar="[format#bold,format#italic,format#underline,links#modifylink,links#unlink]">
            </inline>
            <icons jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured">
                <bold jcr:primaryType="nt:unstructured"
                    command="format#bold"
                    icon="textItalic"/>
            </icons>
        </cui>
    </uiSettings>
</text>

Switch to CoralUI 2 Rich Text Editor switch-to-coralui-rich-text-editor

On a page, you can either include CoralUI 2 RTE clientlib or the CoralUI 3 RTE clientlib. By default, Rich Text Editor includes the CoralUI 3 RTE clientlib. To switch to CoralUI 2 RTE, perform the following steps.

NOTE
Adobe does not recommend it as a best practice. Switch to CoralUI 2 RTE as a last resort. Custom plugins for CoralUI 2 RTE work with CoralUI 3 RTE if the plugins do not depend on RTE internals, such as classes.
If you are using custom plugins for CoralUI3 RTE, use rte.coralui3 library.
  1. Overlay the node /libs/cq/gui/components/authoring/editors/clientlibs/core under /apps, and do the following:

    • Replace rte.coralui3 with rte.coralui2 for the dependencies property.
    • Replace cq.authoring.editor.core.inlineediting.rte.coralui3 with cq.authoring.editor.core.inlineediting.rte.coralui2 for the embed property.
    • Replace cq.authoring.rte.coralui3 with cq.authoring.rte.coralui2 for the embed property.
  2. Overlay the nodes /libs/cq/gui/components/authoring/dialog/richtext/clientlibs/rte/coralui3 and /libs/cq/gui/components/authoring/dialog/richtext/clientlibs/rte/coralui2 under /apps.

    Remove category cq.authoring.dialog from /apps/cq/gui/components/authoring/dialog/richtext/clientlibs/rte/coralui3 and add it to /apps/cq/gui/components/authoring/dialog/richtext/clientlibs/rte/coralui2.

  3. Change any other dependency that is getting included on the page from rte.coralui3 to rte.coralui2. For example, after overlaying the node /libs/mcm/campaign/components/touch-ui/clientlibs/rte under /apps, change any dependency on it from rte.coralui3 to rte.coralui2.

  4. Overlay the node cq/ui/widgets under /apps. Replace the dependency cq.rte at the node /apps/cq/ui/widgets with cq.coralui2.rte.

NOTE
CoralUI 2 RTE uses handlebars templates for plug-in dialogs. Therefore, the CoralUI 2 RTE clientlib had a dependency on the handlebars clientlib. CoralUI 3 RTE does not use handlebars templates and does not have any associated dependency. If your custom plug-ins use handlebars templates, include the handlebars clientlib in your web page.

Further Information further-information

For more information about configuring the RTE, see the AEM Widget API reference.

In particular, to see the plug-ins and related options available:

  • The CQ.form.RichText component provides a form field for editing styled text information (rich text). To know all the parameters available for the rich text form, see the Config Options.

  • The RichText component provides a wide range of functionality using plug-ins listed under CQ.form.rte.plugins.Plugin. For each plug-in:

    • see the Features for details of functionality that can be enabled (or disabled)
    • See the Config Options for all parameters available for detailed configuration of the appropriate plug-in
  • More information about HTML Rules for links is also available.

These can be used to extend and customize your own RTE. For example, to list the anchors available in the page when creating a link you can provide your own implementation of the LinkPlugin.

Known limitations known-limitations

AEM RTE capability has the following limitations:

  • RTE capabilities are supported only in AEM component dialogs. RTE is not supported on wizards or Foundation-forms like Page Properties and Scaffolding on Touch-enabled UI.

  • AEM does not work on Hybrid devices.

  • Do not name the RTE configuration node config. Otherwise, the RTE configuration takes effect for only the administrators and not for the users in the group content-author.

  • RTE does not support inline frame or iframe to embed content.

Best practices and tips best-practices-and-tips

  • Enable only the plug-ins without pop-up for a floating dialog. Plug-ins without pop-up are smaller in size and are most suitable for a floating dialog.
  • Enable the plug-ins with larger pop-up, such as the Paste plug-in, only in the full-screen dialog mode or in full-screen mode. Plug-ins with large pop-up need more screen real-estate to provide a good authoring experience.
  • If you are using custom plugins for CoralUI3 RTE, use rte.coralui3 library.

Troubleshoot frequent issues with RTE troubleshoot-issues-with-aem-rich-text-editor

How to select multiple table cells?

To select multiple cells in a table, press Ctrl or Cmd key and then click the table cells one-by-one.

Now perform operation on the selection, say set the properties of the selected cells.

Hyperlinks are lost when editing a component using Configure button

Add a hyperlink in a text component by editing it using the Configure button. You may lose the hyperlink when editing it again and validating the hyperlink for the second time.

A workaround is to click in the text component when the edit dialog is displayed the second time and then run the link validation.

This issue is resolved in AEM 6.3 and later.

HTML content added in source-edit mode is lost

Do not add a XSS-prone HTML. AEM, and not RTE, may remove some HTML content to adhere to the XSS antisamy rules.

To verify that the pasted HTML is saved, check the saved content in CRXDE (in the content node).

If not saved, the HTML must have been removed by RTE as it did not adhere to the RTE’s rules.

If saved in CRXDE but not rendered on the Page (to check rendering, see page’s preview, it is removed by AEM XSS rules.

Multifield component is not working as expected

To create multifield component, use CoralUI 3 exclusively. Do not use CoralUI 2 component dialogs.

Also, verify that your multifield implementation code and node structure are correct.

Configuration available to administrators are not available to authors

If the interface configurations updates are reflected for administrators but not for author accounts, ensure that the configuration node is not named config. Use the configPath property.

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