Hi All

While you make many valid points, there is a bit of a lack of a broader vision, crippled perhaps by an over-commitment to text mode.

This problem has been solved with the advent of the TiddlyWiki, which use WikiText.

They use CamelCase a lot. A CamelCase word is automatically linked within a single TiddlyWiki by the inbuilt editor to another point within the text. Hence the MainMenu I use in every TiddlyWiki uses CamelCase.

And yes, they are best viewed with a web client (browser).

See tiddlywiki.com. Downloads are free.

Search there for WikiText for more. The homepage is of course a TiddlyWiki.

Note also the broad ecosystem surrounding TiddlyWikis.

Here is one of mine: http://savage.net.au/misc/symbolic.language.html

It's a download accompanying a TV script I'm preparing to submit to ABC TV here in Melbourne Victoria.

Click on the MainMenu item TiddlyWikis for more about the TiddlyWiki concept, especially about the fact that the inbuilt edit has a little command language and can generate HTML for you.

I keep a directory full of these, one per project.

---
Cheers
Ron
savage.net.au

Reply via email to