How to Integrate Google Search in WebHelp Classic Output
It is possible to integrate the Google Search Engine into your WebHelp Classic output and you can specify where you want the results to appear in your WebHelp page.
Using Oxygen XML Editor/Author
To integrate the Google Search Engine into your WebHelp output using a
transformation scenario from within Oxygen XML Editor/Author, follow this procedure:
- Go to the Google Custom Search Engine page using your Google account.
- Select the Create a custom search engine button.
- Follow the on-screen instructions to create a search engine for your site. At the end
of this process you should obtain a code snippet that looks like
this:
<script> (function() { var cx = '000888210889775888983:8mn4x_mf-yg'; var gcse = document.createElement('script'); gcse.type = 'text/javascript'; gcse.async = true; gcse.src = (document.location.protocol == 'https:' ? 'https:' : 'http:') + '//www.google.com/cse/cse.js?cx=' + cx; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(gcse, s); } )(); </script>
- Save the script into a well-formed HTML file called googlecse.html.
- In Oxygen XML Editor/Author, click the Configure Transformation Scenario(s) action from the toolbar (or the . menu
- Select an existing WebHelp Responsive transformation scenario (depending on your needs, it may be with or without feedback) and click the Duplicate button to open the Edit Scenario dialog box.
- Switch to the Parameters tab and edit the
webhelp.google.search.script
parameter to reference the googlecse.html file that you created earlier. - You can also use the
webhelp.google.search.results
parameter to choose where to display the search results.- Create an HTML file with the following content:
<div class="gcse-searchresults-only" data-autoSearchOnLoad="true" data-queryParameterName="searchQuery"></div>
(you must use the HTML5 version for the GCSE). For more information about other supported attributes, see Google Custom Search: Supported Attributes. - Set the value of the
webhelp.google.search.results
parameter to the file path of the file you just created. If this parameter is not specified, the following code is used:<div class="gcse-searchresults-only" data-autoSearchOnLoad="true" data-queryParameterName="searchQuery"></div>
.
- Create an HTML file with the following content:
- Click Ok and run the transformation scenario.
Using a Script Outside of Oxygen XML Editor/Author
Important: Running WebHelp transformations from a script outside of Oxygen XML
Editor/Author requires an additional license and some additional setup:
- You must have a valid license for the Oxygen XML WebHelp Plugin (https://www.oxygenxml.com/buy_webhelp.html).
- The Oxygen XML WebHelp Plugin must be installed and integrated.
To integrate the Google Search Engine into your WebHelp Classic output using a
script outside of Oxygen XML
Editor/Author, follow this procedure:
- Go to the Google Custom Search Engine page using your Google account.
- Select the Create a custom search engine button.
- Follow the on-screen instructions to create a search engine for your site. At the end
of this process you should obtain a code snippet that looks like
this:
<script> (function() { var cx = '000888210889775888983:8mn4x_mf-yg'; var gcse = document.createElement('script'); gcse.type = 'text/javascript'; gcse.async = true; gcse.src = (document.location.protocol == 'https:' ? 'https:' : 'http:') + '//www.google.com/cse/cse.js?cx=' + cx; var s = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(gcse, s); } )(); </script>
- Save the script into a well-formed HTML file called googlecse.html.
- Use the
webhelp.google.search.script
parameter in your transformation script and set its value to reference the googlecse.html file that you created earlier. - You can also use the
webhelp.google.search.results
parameter to choose where to display the search results.- Create an HTML file with the following content:
<div class="gcse-searchresults-only" data-autoSearchOnLoad="true" data-queryParameterName="searchQuery"></div>
(you must use the HTML5 version for the GCSE). For more information about other supported attributes, see Google Custom Search: Supported Attributes. - Set the value of the
webhelp.google.search.results
parameter to the file path of the file you just created. If this parameter is not specified, the following code is used:<div class="gcse-searchresults-only" data-autoSearchOnLoad="true" data-queryParameterName="searchQuery"></div>
.
- Create an HTML file with the following content:
-
Execute the transformation script.