I'm trying to use the <$list> widget generate table rows. One is this even possible. Two How? Here is simplified version of code I've tried.
\define davout-list(levels: "1,3,5") | ! Level | ! Blah | <$list filter="[[$levels$]split[,]]" variable="level"> | <<level>> | Blah | </$list> \end \define davout-list2(levels: "1,3,5") | ! Level | ! Blah | <$list filter="[[$levels$]split[,]]" variable="level"> | <<level>> | Blah | <$wikify name=wikifiedRow text=| <<level>> | Blah |> <<wikifiedRow>> </$wikify> </$list> \end <<davout-list>> <<davout-list2>> The html it generates: <table><tbody><tr class="evenRow"><th align="center"> Level</th><th align="center"> Blah</th></tr></tbody></table><p> | 1 | Blah | | 3 | Blah | | 5 | Blah | </p><table><tbody><tr class="evenRow"><th align="center"> Level</th><th align="center"> Blah</th></tr></tbody></table><p> | 1 | Blah | > | Blah |> | | 3 | Blah | > | Blah |> | | 5 | Blah | > | Blah |> | </p> It's closing the table and generating <p> tags. --------------------------------------------------------- A more general question. It's been stated that macros are text substitution not functions that return a value. And they don't "evaluate". I've seen first hand they don't return a value, but they do seem to at least execute some code. For example they do call other macros: \define a() <<b "here">> \end \define b(where) $where$ \end <<a>> produces: here So what are the rules for what macros will and will not "execute"? Thanks. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to tiddlywiki+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/5d782dff-9120-4b5c-bd45-2b0353c9abafn%40googlegroups.com.