Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread 'Peter Buyze' via TiddlyWiki
Before choosing for TB I considered Roam, but the lack of security put me off immediately. It is not stated explicitly on the site, so I learned about it by asking users. TB and TMap combined are a good alternative for me. 14 Apr 2020, 15:48 by alecu...@gmail.com: > People are happy to share

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Ed Heil
That's exactly what I was thinking of! Thank you, I wish I'd found that earlier! On Tuesday, April 14, 2020 at 8:54:05 AM UTC-4, David Gifford wrote: > > Ed, I remember recently seeing just such a cheatsheet posted somewhere > from a link in this forum. So I know it exists... > > This is an

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread David Gifford
Ed, I remember recently seeing just such a cheatsheet posted somewhere from a link in this forum. So I know it exists... This is an older one, probably only for non-noobies: http://tobibeer.github.io/tb5/#Variables%20vs.%20Parameters On Tue, Apr 14, 2020 at 7:49 AM Ed Heil wrote: > Same re:

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Ed Heil
Same re: Tiddlyspot, the SSL issue is kinda a big deal. With regards to intros to tiddlywiki, I wanted to throw the following out there to the community In terms of intros/guides to Tiddlywiki, one of the things that's been a thorn in my side while learning is all the various kinds of

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Anne-Laure Le Cunff
People are happy to share notes from Dropbox, Evernote, Roam and Notion without having their own domain, so I don't think tiddlyspot.com is an issue in itself (even if I heard that in American English the tiddly brand may not be the best). I'm just not comfortable recommending something that's so

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Mat
Anne-Laure Le Cunff wrote: > > Thank you! I actually started typing a paragraph about TiddlySpot and > removed it. The reason why I didn't include is that there's no SSL/HTTPs, > and many people are looking at Roam alternatives mainly for privacy > reasons. Is it something that will get

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Anne-Laure Le Cunff
Thank you! I actually started typing a paragraph about TiddlySpot and removed it. The reason why I didn't include is that there's no SSL/HTTPs, and many people are looking at Roam alternatives mainly for privacy reasons. Is it something that will get addressed at some point, maybe with

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Mike Manchester
I'm with Ed, after trying many ways I've ended up with Quine(2) and TiddlyDesktop. When I was using node.js I loved some of the features but to me they were to costly for me. I wanted to be able to store my wiki's in the cloud so I could access them from anywhere and have them updated when I

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Mat
If I were a noob, I'd want to hear about Tiddlyspot which allows free hosting of TW's. It has been the go-to solution for many people over the years, including myself, and native TW has a built-in saver for it (Controlpanel > Saving > Tiddlyspot). The point is to get an

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread 'Peter Buyze' via TiddlyWiki
Anne, I only ever installed TB because of the bi-directional link feature. I have been looking for a wiki-like tool for a number of years now, have tried a fair number, looked at TW, ran away screaming 2-3 years ago, decided to come back 2 weeks ago, and fell in love. I have needed to get

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Anne-Laure Le Cunff
This is live ! Comments and feedback welcome. The next one will be about installing the Node.js version and using it as a static site generator. @Peter: I'm personally getting lots of value without touching any HTML, I think this is a great

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread 'Peter Buyze' via TiddlyWiki
There will undoubtedly be new users, but I am not sure there will be many. TW is a fantastic app (not sure that's the right word for it), probably unbeatable if one were to make a thorough, deep comparison with other note-taking apps. Nevertheless, TW as is will more likely appeal to those who

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-14 Thread Anne-Laure Le Cunff
The tutorial changed quite a bit ! Removed the export a static website bit which will be for a more advanced tutorial. That removed the need for Node.js so it's now much, much simpler. Still working on it

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread Ed Heil
(although I see that the tutorial shows how to export to a static site, something which you want to use Node for) On Monday, April 13, 2020 at 11:14:45 PM UTC-4, Ed Heil wrote: > > Yes, after going through a lot of back and forth about which save method I > should use when I first started

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread Ed Heil
Yes, after going through a lot of back and forth about which save method I should use when I first started messing with tw's, I've landed on TiddlyDesktop (and Quine2 for iOS) -- It's zero-friction; the only issues seem to be dragging and dropping things from other tiddlywikis. On Monday,

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread Birthe C
I wonder about the dragging and dropping of plugins. https://tiddlywiki.com/static/Installing%2520custom%2520plugins%2520on%2520Node.js.html Birthe mandag den 13. april 2020 kl. 23.58.41 UTC+2 skrev Anne-Laure Le Cunff: > > I'm working on a step-by-step getting started tutorial — you can see me

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread 'Mark S.' via TiddlyWiki
Why node and not TiddlyDesktop? With classic node, you can only run one TW file at a time. Or you have to open a second command box and launch another. It requires steps to install node, and then tiddlywiki, and then to initialize your files. With TiddlyDesktop, everything works pretty much

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread David Gifford
On Mon, Apr 13, 2020 at 5:21 PM Anne-Laure Le Cunff wrote: > Hey Dave! > > To me the goal of the "proper install" is to not have to deal with saving > and re-saving the file all the time, and I want to make sure the user > understands that, and why it's worth going through the hassle of

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread Anne-Laure Le Cunff
Hey Dave! To me the goal of the "proper install" is to not have to deal with saving and re-saving the file all the time, and I want to make sure the user understands that, and why it's worth going through the hassle of installing Node. I do want the tutorial to be easy, but I want people to

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread David Gifford
Hi Anne-Laure Looking at your tutorial - you suggest the user download the file and play with it. Then later you give the "proper" instructions. But there is no way to save changes at that point if they have just downloaded it. Wouldn't it be better to have them play with it in the online empty

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread Mohammad
On Tuesday, April 14, 2020 at 2:28:41 AM UTC+4:30, Anne-Laure Le Cunff wrote: > > I'm working on a step-by-step getting started tutorial — you can see me > work on it live here > > . > Wow!

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread Anne-Laure Le Cunff
I'm working on a step-by-step getting started tutorial — you can see me work on it live here . :) On Monday, April 13, 2020 at 10:36:01 PM UTC+1, David Gifford wrote: > > On Mon, Apr 13, 2020 at

Re: [tw5] Re: Ride the Wave

2020-04-13 Thread David Gifford
On Mon, Apr 13, 2020 at 4:14 PM Mohammad wrote: > Good news! > > On Monday, April 13, 2020 at 11:57:07 PM UTC+4:30, David Gifford wrote: >> >> FYI >> >> Anne-Laure Le Cunff is an influencer with 10,000+ subscribers, and is >> already promoting TiddlyWiki on her website and on Twitter. (Thank