This still seems to be happening, Janne. I'm noticing it particularly when pasting text in. For example, I'll copy some of the front page of the site:
Moodle is a course management system (CMS) - a free, Open Source software package designed using sound pedagogical principles,to help educators create effective online learning communities. You candownload and use it on any computer you have handy (includingwebhosts), yet it can scale from a single-teacher site to a40,000-student University. This site itself is created using Moodle, socheck out the Moodle Features demos, the Demonstration Courses or read the latest Moodle Buzz.
This looked fine in the editor, but some spaces dissappeared after saving. I can't see the pattern in it ...
Moodle is a course management system (CMS) - a free, Open Source software package designed using sound pedagogical principles,to help educators create effective online learning communities. You candownload and use it on any computer you have handy (includingwebhosts), yet it can scale from a single-teacher site to a40,000-student University. This site itself is created using Moodle, socheck out the Moodle Features demos, the Demonstration Courses or read the latest Moodle Buzz.
This looked fine in the editor, but some spaces dissappeared after saving. I can't see the pattern in it ...
It is not so random. You can see the pattern by inserting an alert code arround line 1892:
}then pasting some html text by Ctrl-V. Firefox splits up the pasted html text into chunks separated by newline codes by replacing some spaces with newlines so that every chunk has less than 72 characters. Since HTMLArea.formathtml swallows every newline code, as the result, these replaced spaces are removed.
}
alert(this.getInnerHTML());
break;
case "lefttoright":
case "righttoleft":