Me too. ;-)
On Sunday, September 13, 2020 at 10:35:31 AM UTC+2, Ste wrote:
>
> I just grab those plugins... Gotta catch em all..
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I just grab those plugins... Gotta catch em all..
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Hi Ed,
Thank you for your post. I have often thought about if tiddlywiki could
have a use for exactly the kind of problem you describe so well. So glad
you are able to use your wiki for something so important.
Please do not misunderstand the following! Maybe we should all have a wiki
like Eds
I too try to stay with the core as much as possible. I agree with Talha131
on this as it does describe my situation here pretty well.
I no longer have the capacity to make extensive changes or adjust things
for many of the awesome addons being produced to my needs due to brain
damage but I do
I use the TW core version.
I also try to make sure I use as little third party plugins as possible.
Right now, I only have the ReLink plugin that is not in the core. Other
plugins like Katex and Highlight are in the core.
You do not have to worry about a TW edition's lack of upgrades because
On Friday, September 11, 2020 at 10:27:58 PM UTC+2, Thomas Elmiger wrote:
On the other hand: When you have built a solution that works for you, you
> don’t *have* to upgrade. A TiddlyWiki can work for decades without any
> updates.
>
+1 That's the point. If you don't need the new
Casey,
Personally I call empty.html the "minimalist version", I would prefer a
"standard edition" be officially released with a few simple customisations
so the new users don't start totally raw.
I believe empty.html should only be used by experienced users building a
new solution from the
>
> On the other hand: When you have built a solution that works for you, you
> don’t *have* to upgrade. A TiddlyWiki can work for decades without any
> updates.
>
I think this the key thing. You don't need to update to future versions of
the core if you are happy with your setup.
I am in
>... I'm just not sure where to invest my time.
I use core as well with minimal set-up - no fields, limited plugins to
future-proof parsing down the road to another system if browser dependency
someday breaks.
But there are so many cool things that it is hard not to try/play :-) and
if you
Same here. At first I used the core version only. Then I began to fix some
things I did not like using CSS only. Writing my own extensions – first
macros, later plugins and themes – made me feel safe, knowing exactly what
was going on. Every time I had to overwrite core stuff, I did it with bad
The core (with some third-party plugins) TiddlyWiki user here. And mostly
because of the same fears as yours. I don't quite believe in the stability
and long-time developement of the customised versions of TW.
best,
Darek
piątek, 11 września 2020 o 21:45:00 UTC+2 Casey napisał(a):
> With the
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