[tw5] Re: [TW5] Introducing TiddlyTables a plugin for creating sortable tables.

2019-12-02 Thread HansWobbe
@ Alan:

I added the "z_tag" tag and so must apologize for not checking with you 
first.

I am very fond of TiddlyTables and as a result I tagged your Introductory 
post that way as part of a test to see if using Tags is an effective way to 
help folks find useful things in this googleGroups environment. 

Regards,
Hans

@ TT:

Since Tags are displayed in alphabetical order, I used the "z_"... to push 
the tag to the left.  This is useful in a positionalNotation since that 
effectively corresponds to the use of indices in a coordinate system ( like 
the 128 x 256 x 256 x 256 unicode structure ) since Groups, Sheets, Rows 
and Columns can also be used to associate attributes to the dimensions of 
higher dimensional arrays.

I know; TMI = T(oo) M(uch) I(nformation).  But you did ask. :-)

Cheers,
Hans


TT,
> Not sure what z_tag was but I removed it.
>
> Cheers,
> Alan
>
>
> On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 8:14:37 AM UTC-6, TiddlyTweeter wrote:
>>
>> Why has this thread got a tag " z_tag " 
>> ? What is that 
>> about?
>>
>>

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[tw5] Re: [TW5] Introducing TiddlyTables a plugin for creating sortable tables.

2019-12-02 Thread Mohammad
Hi Alan,
 This is really great! 
It is funny, I tried to make editable tables based on TiddlyTables in few 
last days! I sent a version for your review comments

By the way some initial feedback


   1. When you are in edit mode and you sort a column, then you cannot edit 
   it at the same time
   2. Tiddlywiki will lose its focus if you change cell values of sorted 
   column
   3. You may freeze the column table sorted by it (that is what I did in 
   my simple version)

You may also add feature to generate table NOT only from fields by also 
from index:values from json and data tiddlers.


Many thanks for your elegant code and documentation!


Cheers
Mohammad

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[tw5] Re: [TW5] Introducing TiddlyTables a plugin for creating sortable tables.

2019-12-02 Thread Alan Aldrich
All,
I updated TiddlyTables with an enhancement I hope you enjoy - *read/edit 
mode toggle for all columns*. 
http://tiddlytables.tiddlyspot.com/
Victor's request got me thinking this should be a standard feature. There 
is a new option under "Editor/Mode" in the edit menu called "Mode". This 
dropdown is linked to the field "tbl-mode" of a table. When set to "edit" 
it causes all fields to use the edit template. Some columns like title, 
modified and created are excluded. I plan to document this feature in more 
detail soon. Please give it a try and let me know what you think. 
Additionally, I corrected an issue with the delete column. It should work 
better now.

Mohammad,
I would like to eventually get TiddlyTables and maybe the Task Manager into 
the plugin directory. Both plugins are still in beta as I wanted to get 
feedback from the community before rolling to v1.0. The Task Manager could 
be refined a bit more and I would like to develop a little more 
documentation for it and TiddlyTables before I promote them too much. I 
would love to get more technical feedback on the code in case there are 
some optimizations that can be made. I may need to post something on 
TiddlyWikiDev for that. In any case, I think the next big milestone is the 
1.0 stable release. I want to make sure there aren't any missing use cases, 
documentation is adequate, and of course no bugs. Thank you for your 
feedback so far and thanks in advance for any future testing/feedback.

TT,
Not sure what z_tag was but I removed it.

Cheers,
Alan


On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 8:14:37 AM UTC-6, TiddlyTweeter wrote:
>
> Why has this thread got a tag " z_tag " 
> ? What is that 
> about?
>
> I added a " tables " tag to the thread.
>
> Tagging is good in  GG (web version). Very helpful when you search later. 
> Your major search tag should likely be " tables ".
>
> This gets it at the moment: GG search on author & subject 
> 
> .
>
> Best wishes
> TT 
>
> On Monday, 9 September 2019 21:01:41 UTC+2, Alan Aldrich wrote:
>>
>> Greetings All, I am a long time fan of TiddlyWiki but new to the 
>> community. First and foremost, I would like to thank Jeremy for creating 
>> TiddlyWiki and everyone who supports it. As a way to learn the ins and outs 
>> of TiddlyWiki I started a "table builder" plugin that I have been gradually 
>> improving in my spare time. I finally got around to finishing it up 
>> recently and would like to share it with the community. 
>>
>> The ability for the entire wiki to import/export to/from a spreadsheet is 
>> a fascinating feature of TiddlyWiki, and I wanted to build on that strength 
>> by creating a simple way to query data in the wiki and display it in a 
>> tabular way. I am calling it TiddlyTables. The following link contains 
>> installation instructions and examples:
>>
>> http://tiddlytables.tiddlyspot.com/
>>
>> There is also a "task manager" plugin that can be downloaded. Its primary 
>> purpose is to demonstrate the features of TiddlyTables. I look forward to 
>> hearing from you. I will do my best to answer questions and I appreciate 
>> any feedback. 
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Alan Aldrich
>>
>

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[tw5] Re: Best approach for multiple wikis

2019-12-02 Thread TonyM
Victor,

This is a Big Question, with perhaps multiple answers, each of which could 
be quite involved, so I am not surprise you have not had much feedback.

I can't help you with GitHub so much But JEDS's Bob solution can handle 
wikis and subwikis so if you could make the folders below part of a 
repository, you may be approaching what you are asking for. 

Personally I have multiple single file wikis for many subject areas but I 
have some select reference wikis and what I call a core wiki where I place 
a common directory and more. I have a little registration system to 
register a new wiki and submit it to the directory. This I can drag and 
drop to the core (displayed as an Iframe). I also create bundles for any 
reusable content, and try and make everything reusable.

My Point, Whilst there are technologies to help multiple Tiddlywiki's are 
best handled with the development of your own standards and practices, 
built on top of tiddlywiki.
 
Regards
Tony

On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 9:39:56 PM UTC+11, Victor Dorneanu wrote:
>
> Hi everyone, 
>
> what I want to achieve is to have multiple wikis for each "area" of 
> knowledge. Let's say:
>
>
>- coding
>- notes (from books, articles etc.)
>- cooking recipes
>- etc.
>
>
> I like to manage my tiddlers at a single place, that means: Have 
> everything inside a big (git) repository. However, when I want to 
> share/publish my content I'd like to have multiple files for each knowledge 
> area:
>
>
>- coding.html (for coding)
>   - everything that is tagged with "coding" or has "coding" as a 
>   parent tag
>   - notes.html (for notes)
>   - everything that is tagged with "notes" or has "notes" as a parent 
>   tag
>- and so forth
>
>
> For every published wiki I'd like to also have a different welcome page 
> and perhaps different style (CSS) customizations. 
>
> I came across this Github issue thread 
>  where Tobi Beer 
> (awesome work BTW!) presented some dirty implementation 
>  of a "monolithic" based multiple 
> wiki approach. Without going into details of current discussion regarding 
> that topic: What would be the most easiest way to achieve what I've 
> described before?
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
>
> Greetings, 
> Victor 
>
>

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[tw5] Re: A tag command?

2019-12-02 Thread TonyM
Tim,

There are tools that will help you do this but learning how to do it 
yourself can be quite informative.

If you can generate a list of your tiddler this way
<$list filter="yourfilter here">



you can place this in a button like this so that on clicking the button the 
actions will be applied to each tiddler

<$button>
<$list filter="yourfilter here">
  "Actions"

buttonname


So in your case you want to add mytag

<$action-sendmessage $message="tm-add-tag" $param="mytag"/>
but you could add other actions there


If you see this you learn the fieldmangler widget 
 is required for some "messages" 
and it will not work unless its wrapped as follows. 

Noting fieldmangler defaults to currentTiddler so it needs to be where the 
currentTiddler value changes


So the final result you can test on tiddlywiki.com is


<$button>
<$list filter="[prefix[A]]">
   <$fieldmangler>
  <$action-sendmessage $message="tm-add-tag" $param="mytag"/>
  

Tag below with mytag


<$list filter="[prefix[A]]">



Note how I include a list along with the button so I can see what I would 
impact.


You could have a filter stored elsewhere referenced in both list and button to 
make sure they have an identical filter. Even editable;


Now I have taught you to fish, https://kookma.github.io/TW-Commander/ will help 
you without learning as much


Regards

Tony


On Tuesday, December 3, 2019 at 5:14:34 AM UTC+11, TimP wrote:
>
> Hi, 
>
> I can find a group of tiddlers with some text in their title. 
> What I would like to do is add a tag to each member of the group. 
>
> Is there a way to do that? 
>
>
> cheers 
> Tim 
>
> -- 
> Tim Pizey - http://tim.pizey.uk/ 
>

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[tw5] Re: Finding Stuff Here: "The One Legged Tortoise" problem

2019-12-02 Thread HansWobbe
@ Mohammad:

Thanks for the very useful reminder about the "Search for messages" 
facility.

@ Josiah:


   - As tags appear more frequently, I suspect "Newbies" will figure out 
   how to use them.
   - The same may happen for existing users who have simply over-looked the 
   value of Tags in prior times.
   - Email users may miss oot of edited content.  However, whenever a new 
   post is appended, it is popped back to the top.  If people occasionally 
   take the time to edit the "Lede" item, and add a bit of useful refined 
   comment, then ever mre polished content will result.  Don't forget there is 
   also nothing stopping anyone from adding a Search command as a Link, to the 
   first post.

Cheers,
Hans

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Re: [tw5] Best approach for multiple wikis

2019-12-02 Thread Pit.W.

Hi victor,

good question! I am permanently wrestling with the same issue - with 
very limited success!


What I do at the moment is:

1.   I have a plethoria of wikis, standalone files on my USB
1. In each one I have the names of editors and the journal tag
   customised
2. I have a few wikis on node.js
3. On all of them I have the Bundles-plugin, and on all of them I have
   a fixed set of standardised filter rules (bundles), they channel the
   migration of tiddler swarms;
4. Then I export stuff from each standalone wiki and throw it into the
   appropriate node.js wiki
1. there I can "bundle" it according to 1.1 above
2. But : could there be a Super-wiki, which could look into all the
   other node.js folder? dunno - I am too dumb

Not perfect ? Oh yes, very imperfect!

Cumbersome? Yes!

Improvement? Please, somebody find one!

Any alternative from the big companies (SoftTyny, ...et al)? ... with a 
300.000+ cost-free developer community, consultancy and advisory force, 
off-line, cloud-free, future-proof, MIT-crypto and whatnot...? I didnt 
find any in 40 years


... TW it is...

Pit.W

Am 02.12.2019 um 11:39 schrieb Victor Dorneanu:

Hi everyone,

what I want to achieve is to have multiple wikis for each "area" of 
knowledge. Let's say:


  * coding
  * notes (from books, articles etc.)
  * cooking recipes
  * etc.


I like to manage my tiddlers at a single place, that means: Have 
everything inside a big (git) repository. However, when I want to 
share/publish my content I'd like to have multiple files for each 
knowledge area:


  * coding.html (for coding)
  o everything that is tagged with "coding" or has coding as a
parent tag
  * notes.html (for notes)
  o everything that is tagged with "notes" or has coding as a
parent tag
  * and so forth


For every published wiki I'd like to also have a different welcome 
page and perhaps different style (CSS) customizations.


I came across this Github issue thread 
 where Tobi Beer 
(awesome work BTW!) presented some dirty implementation 
 of a "monolithic" based 
multiple wiki approach. Without going into details of current 
discussion regarding that topic: What would be the most easiest way to 
achieve what I've described before?


Thanks in advance.


Greetings,
Victor

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[tw5] Re: Finding Stuff Here: "The One Legged Tortoise" problem

2019-12-02 Thread Mohammad
Hi Josiah,
 I am not sure if you have discussed this before! but on Google forum page 
(web) there is a search box at the top of the page with a big blue button!
In the right side of that searchbox you see a down arrow (show search 
option) if you click you will have many options to make search in the forum!
It is amazing that the search string will be written in the searchbox and 
you can see how Google makes search in the forum!

--Mohammad



On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 7:29:50 PM UTC+3:30, TiddlyTweeter wrote:
>
> A *thing is* finding what has been done in this GG.
>
> It's too Darwinian by far. Past threads are automatically put on the 
> Extinction List.
>
> But IF you have some unique string (especially in a subject line) you may 
> survive ... like The One Legged Tortoise.
>
> Search: subject: One AND Legged AND Tortoise 
> 
>
> An aside
> TT
>

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Re: [tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread Arlen Beiler
And here's the link for it:

https://github.com/Arlen22/TW5-storage-plugin

On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 1:49 PM Arlen Beiler  wrote:

> Well, Jed's adapter and everyone's thoughts so far inspired me to do a
> little exploring and I managed to put this little proof of concept
> together. It turned out I did not need to touch the client at all and only
> modify four routes on the server. What's nice is that the index is still
> generated as usual so you can turn off the plugin and make changes to the
> initial HTML document if you want, then turn it back on and all your
> database tiddlers come back again. Almost like a template. The plugin is
> inside the data folder for now, but the npm install needs to be done in the
> tiddlywiki root folder (the folder containing tiddlywiki.js). The readme
> has rather simple instructions and the npm install command that needs to be
> run.
>
> On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 10:38 AM Arlen Beiler  wrote:
>
>> I think in this case I'm rather aiming to build something new on top of
>> TiddlyWiki5. I may revisit the rest of the TiddlyWeb protocol at a later
>> time and take some ideas from it. However, I think that to build something
>> new it would need to be built using TiddlyWiki5 from the ground up, whereas
>> tiddlyspot was built for TWC. That's just how I work best. For someone else
>> to take a different approach would not bother me at all.
>>
>> On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 5:30 AM mauloop  wrote:
>>
>>> Why not to reuse Tiddlyweb/Tiddlyspace work?
>>>
>>>- It has MySQL backend
>>>- It is multiuser and allows concurrent editing
>>>- It has public and private spaces
>>>- It uses the standard Node.js sync-adaptor
>>>- It works with TWC as well
>>>
>>> IMO it is a great piece of software. Not easy to set up. I did it on a
>>> local VM just to give it a try and Chris kindly helped me to solve some
>>> problems I fell into. I always feel bad when I see that good software falls
>>> into oblivion. Maybe it is not to be taken as is, but it could be a good
>>> starting point. Just to not reinvent the wheel.
>>>
>>> Another thought is... this is an old paradigm. PMario's suggestion (DAT
>>> protocol) goes one step beyond, moving towards the p2p paradigm. I use
>>> Syncthing to keep my devices synced. Both (DAT and Syncthing, which, I
>>> think, uses QUIC behind the scenes) provides versioning, encryption and,
>>> last but not least, ... privacy!
>>>
>>> TWedereation goes this direction too, isn't it?
>>>
>>> I have no much developing skills to contribute, but I would be happy to
>>> help testing if needed.
>>>
>>> )+(
>>>
>>> --
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>>> Groups "TiddlyWiki" group.
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>>> 
>>> .
>>>
>>

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Re: [tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread Arlen Beiler
Well, Jed's adapter and everyone's thoughts so far inspired me to do a
little exploring and I managed to put this little proof of concept
together. It turned out I did not need to touch the client at all and only
modify four routes on the server. What's nice is that the index is still
generated as usual so you can turn off the plugin and make changes to the
initial HTML document if you want, then turn it back on and all your
database tiddlers come back again. Almost like a template. The plugin is
inside the data folder for now, but the npm install needs to be done in the
tiddlywiki root folder (the folder containing tiddlywiki.js). The readme
has rather simple instructions and the npm install command that needs to be
run.

On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 10:38 AM Arlen Beiler  wrote:

> I think in this case I'm rather aiming to build something new on top of
> TiddlyWiki5. I may revisit the rest of the TiddlyWeb protocol at a later
> time and take some ideas from it. However, I think that to build something
> new it would need to be built using TiddlyWiki5 from the ground up, whereas
> tiddlyspot was built for TWC. That's just how I work best. For someone else
> to take a different approach would not bother me at all.
>
> On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 5:30 AM mauloop  wrote:
>
>> Why not to reuse Tiddlyweb/Tiddlyspace work?
>>
>>- It has MySQL backend
>>- It is multiuser and allows concurrent editing
>>- It has public and private spaces
>>- It uses the standard Node.js sync-adaptor
>>- It works with TWC as well
>>
>> IMO it is a great piece of software. Not easy to set up. I did it on a
>> local VM just to give it a try and Chris kindly helped me to solve some
>> problems I fell into. I always feel bad when I see that good software falls
>> into oblivion. Maybe it is not to be taken as is, but it could be a good
>> starting point. Just to not reinvent the wheel.
>>
>> Another thought is... this is an old paradigm. PMario's suggestion (DAT
>> protocol) goes one step beyond, moving towards the p2p paradigm. I use
>> Syncthing to keep my devices synced. Both (DAT and Syncthing, which, I
>> think, uses QUIC behind the scenes) provides versioning, encryption and,
>> last but not least, ... privacy!
>>
>> TWedereation goes this direction too, isn't it?
>>
>> I have no much developing skills to contribute, but I would be happy to
>> help testing if needed.
>>
>> )+(
>>
>> --
>> 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/cb3cdfd0-e05a-417a-a329-1281e2064ecb%40googlegroups.com
>> 
>> .
>>
>

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[tw5] A tag command?

2019-12-02 Thread Tim Pizey
Hi,

I can find a group of tiddlers with some text in their title.
What I would like to do is add a tag to each member of the group.

Is there a way to do that?


cheers
Tim

-- 
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[tw5] Re: Finding Stuff Here: "The One Legged Tortoise" problem

2019-12-02 Thread TiddlyTweeter
HansWobbe wrote:
>
> One thing that seems to be missing in this Community is the ENTHUSIASTIC 
> Category assignment 
>

Ciao Hans

This are at least THREE reasons  for that ...
 
1 - new users don't know you can add tags ("categories") to posts. 
 We give NO INTRO FOR NEWBIES so they won't know to do it.

2 - many existing users do NOT know you can CREATE at will new tags on 
posts--on anyone's thread at any time;

3 - a lot of the more tech users here prefer EMAIL. Email users can't 
either create or see tags.

The overall result is a HALF-BAKED system that is more cumbersome than it 
could be. 

Thanks for your interest!
TT

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[tw5] Re: Finding Stuff Here: "The One Legged Tortoise" problem

2019-12-02 Thread HansWobbe
There are indeed some very effective and innovative techniques to find 
precisely what is wanted.

One thing that seems to be missing in this Community is the ENTHUSIASTIC 
Category assignment that took place in the days of WardsWiki (the Portland 
Pattern Repository).  Given that TW has much better Logic, Tag Search 
capabilities I fail understand why those existing capabilities are not used 
to solve the problem of Finding Information.

For me, that remains a perplexing puzzle that I will try to chip away at.  
After all, the tale is that Michelangelo created his statue of David by 
simply removing all of the stone that did not look like the foreseen 
result, one chip at a time.

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[tw5] Re: Finding Stuff Here: "The One Legged Tortoise" problem

2019-12-02 Thread TiddlyTweeter
email repeat ...

A *thing is* finding what has been done in this GG.

It's too Darwinian by far. Past threads are automatically put on the 
Extinction List.

But IF you have some unique string (especially in a subject line) you may 
survive ... like The One Legged Tortoise.

Search: subject: One AND Legged AND Tortoise 


An aside
TT

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[tw5] Re: How to remove ALL whitespace using a filter?

2019-12-02 Thread Hubert
My apologies Diego, your solution solves *both* use cases, I didn't check 
properly.

Thank you again!
-Hubert

On Monday, 2 December 2019 16:03:52 UTC, Hubert wrote:
>
> Thank you Diego.
>
> A follow up question, is it possible to detect if a string is only 
> whitespace? As in, ""? Such "string" would consist of no characters but 
> at the same time it would not evaluate to nothing, so the following reveal 
> syntax would not detect it:
>
> <$reveal state="!!input" type="nomatch" text=""/>
>
> I feel this could be accomplished with regex, but I'm no expert. What I'm 
> trying to do is foolproof my text inputs against accidental empty strings 
> because the consequences are not elegant so to speak :)
>
> Thank you again,
> Hubert
>
> On Monday, 2 December 2019 15:43:05 UTC, Diego Mesa wrote:
>>
>> Hey Hubert,
>>
>> Unless Im missunderstanding something, you can use the split operator and 
>> the join operator to accomplish this:
>>
>> <$list filter="[[a black cat hides under a chair]split[ ]join[]]">
>> <>
>> 
>>
>> returns: ablackcathidesunderachair
>>
>>
>> On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 9:18:33 AM UTC-6, Hubert wrote:
>>>
>>> Hello,
>>>
>>> I'm looking for something beyond trim, a filter operator that would 
>>> remove *all *spaces from an input (not just trailing spaces), like here:
>>>
>>> <$list filter="[[a black cat hides under a chair]whitespaceremove[]]">
>>> <>
>>> 
>>>
>>> Where the output would ideally be: *ablackcathidesunderachair*
>>>
>>> Is this possible?
>>>
>>> Thank you,
>>> Hubert
>>>
>>>

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[tw5] Re: How to remove ALL whitespace using a filter?

2019-12-02 Thread Hubert
Thank you Diego.

A follow up question, is it possible to detect if a string is only 
whitespace? As in, ""? Such "string" would consist of no characters but 
at the same time it would not evaluate to nothing, so the following reveal 
syntax would not detect it:

<$reveal state="!!input" type="nomatch" text=""/>

I feel this could be accomplished with regex, but I'm no expert. What I'm 
trying to do is foolproof my text inputs against accidental empty strings 
because the consequences are not elegant so to speak :)

Thank you again,
Hubert

On Monday, 2 December 2019 15:43:05 UTC, Diego Mesa wrote:
>
> Hey Hubert,
>
> Unless Im missunderstanding something, you can use the split operator and 
> the join operator to accomplish this:
>
> <$list filter="[[a black cat hides under a chair]split[ ]join[]]">
> <>
> 
>
> returns: ablackcathidesunderachair
>
>
> On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 9:18:33 AM UTC-6, Hubert wrote:
>>
>> Hello,
>>
>> I'm looking for something beyond trim, a filter operator that would 
>> remove *all *spaces from an input (not just trailing spaces), like here:
>>
>> <$list filter="[[a black cat hides under a chair]whitespaceremove[]]">
>> <>
>> 
>>
>> Where the output would ideally be: *ablackcathidesunderachair*
>>
>> Is this possible?
>>
>> Thank you,
>> Hubert
>>
>>

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[tw5] Re: How to remove ALL whitespace using a filter?

2019-12-02 Thread Diego Mesa
Hey Hubert,

Unless Im missunderstanding something, you can use the split operator and 
the join operator to accomplish this:

<$list filter="[[a black cat hides under a chair]split[ ]join[]]">
<>


returns: ablackcathidesunderachair


On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 9:18:33 AM UTC-6, Hubert wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I'm looking for something beyond trim, a filter operator that would remove 
> *all 
> *spaces from an input (not just trailing spaces), like here:
>
> <$list filter="[[a black cat hides under a chair]whitespaceremove[]]">
> <>
> 
>
> Where the output would ideally be: *ablackcathidesunderachair*
>
> Is this possible?
>
> Thank you,
> Hubert
>
>

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Re: [tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread Arlen Beiler
I think in this case I'm rather aiming to build something new on top of
TiddlyWiki5. I may revisit the rest of the TiddlyWeb protocol at a later
time and take some ideas from it. However, I think that to build something
new it would need to be built using TiddlyWiki5 from the ground up, whereas
tiddlyspot was built for TWC. That's just how I work best. For someone else
to take a different approach would not bother me at all.

On Mon, Dec 2, 2019 at 5:30 AM mauloop  wrote:

> Why not to reuse Tiddlyweb/Tiddlyspace work?
>
>- It has MySQL backend
>- It is multiuser and allows concurrent editing
>- It has public and private spaces
>- It uses the standard Node.js sync-adaptor
>- It works with TWC as well
>
> IMO it is a great piece of software. Not easy to set up. I did it on a
> local VM just to give it a try and Chris kindly helped me to solve some
> problems I fell into. I always feel bad when I see that good software falls
> into oblivion. Maybe it is not to be taken as is, but it could be a good
> starting point. Just to not reinvent the wheel.
>
> Another thought is... this is an old paradigm. PMario's suggestion (DAT
> protocol) goes one step beyond, moving towards the p2p paradigm. I use
> Syncthing to keep my devices synced. Both (DAT and Syncthing, which, I
> think, uses QUIC behind the scenes) provides versioning, encryption and,
> last but not least, ... privacy!
>
> TWedereation goes this direction too, isn't it?
>
> I have no much developing skills to contribute, but I would be happy to
> help testing if needed.
>
> )+(
>
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> 
> .
>

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Re: [tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread Arlen Beiler
PouchDB is a very good first step because of the way it is setup. SQLite
would also be a great first step for targeting SQL databases.

On Sun, Dec 1, 2019 at 9:30 PM TonyM  wrote:

> Jed,
>
> Great work, what a Wiz. I will have a closer look. With the pouchDB have
> any more persistence that local storage I wonder?
>
> Such node solutions are great but we must find an easy way to host such
> things online when needed.
>
> Regards
> Tony
>
> On Monday, December 2, 2019 at 10:06:26 AM UTC+11, Jed Carty wrote:
>>
>> After finding out that I have very little idea how syncadaptors work I
>> started playing with making a new one and ended up with a working pouchdb
>> syncadaptor.
>>
>> It is very rough but it works, it will create a database and save
>> tiddlers to it, delete them when appropriate and then load the tiddlers
>> when you open it up again.
>>
>> At the moment the implementation is just for one wiki, but extending it
>> to have multiple wikis on the same node process would be very straight
>> forward.
>> It has potential for some things people have asked for like being able to
>> search all tiddlers in all available wikis.
>>
>> As a note, this is not noteself, while it could be configured to connect
>> to a remote database, either pouchdb or CouchDB, it doesn't have any of the
>> nice features of noteself other than saving to a database.
>>
>> Considering how straight froward this was making similar adaptors that
>> work with the various flavours of sql databases wouldn't be too hard aside
>> from figuring out the appropriate database schema. That is something I have
>> absolutely no interest in doing but this may work as a reasonable reference
>> design for anyone who wants to make a sql database adaptor.
>>
>> There are instructions on how to use the adaptor in the readme, it is not
>> at all polished and requires node.
>>
>> https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-PouchDBAdaptor
>>
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> .
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[tw5] How to remove ALL whitespace using a filter?

2019-12-02 Thread Hubert
Hello,

I'm looking for something beyond trim, a filter operator that would remove *all 
*spaces from an input (not just trailing spaces), like here:

<$list filter="[[a black cat hides under a chair]whitespaceremove[]]">
<>


Where the output would ideally be: *ablackcathidesunderachair*

Is this possible?

Thank you,
Hubert

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[tw5] Immediate need F2F interview for salesforce developer at Boston,MA

2019-12-02 Thread syed faheem
Hello Associates,

Any available local consultants for Salesforce Developer. I have an
excellent project with my client at Boston, MA.



*Please send your resume to **fah...@mirthconsulting.net*
*  for the below positions.*

Job Title   :  Salesforce Developer

Location  :  Boston, MA

Duration :  12 + Months

Rate  :  $60/Hr

*Interview Process: Phone then F2F or Skype (prefer F2F)*



*Client is looking for consultants who is experienced with Salesforce, CPQ*



Description:

Immediate need for a Salesforce Developer to join a team dedicated to high
levels of productivity - designing solutions that truly help drive our
business forward.

Candidates must have a deep technical expertise with Salesforce, and
experience working with development teams and business leaders to craft
innovative, highly visible, solutions that will be matter to your team and
your organization.

The team is responsible for working directly with Sales Operations, Sales,
and Marketing and Analytics stakeholders to understand business
requirements, design to match those requirements and then implement
appropriate, efficient and effective SFDC solutions; as well as take
responsibility for day-to-day Salesforce administration tasks along with
the rest of the Salesforce Admin team.



Specific Responsibilities :

Develop an understanding of our products and go to market strategy.

Develop an understanding of our applications architecture and core business
application functions.

Work with Business Applications team to understand business and SFDC
configuration.

Immediately play an active role in developing solutions as per business
requirements

Audit SFDC environments with “fresh eyes;” propose improvements and
efficiencies.

Become familiar with additional technologies used in conjunction with SFDC
(namely Informatica Cloud and Zuora)

Take ownership of projects in the development queue and roll-out of
projects that incorporate Informatica Cloud and Zuora CPQ.

Design and develop SFDC-centric solutions to facilitate business goals in
Marketing and Sales departments.

Develop the maturity of the Salesforce platform through continuous
improvement.

*-*



*Thanks & Regards.*

*Syed Faheem | Technical Recruiter *

[image: http://www.mirthconsulting.net/assets/images/mirth2.png]

*6353 N  Claremont Ave Chicago, IL. 60659*

*Direct: 312-428-5615 – 312-428-5338*

*fah...@mirthconsulting.net|  www.mirthconsulting.net|*


*https://www.linkedin.com/company/mirth-consulting-inc*


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[tw5] Re: [TW5] Introducing TiddlyTables a plugin for creating sortable tables.

2019-12-02 Thread TiddlyTweeter
Why has this thread got a tag " z_tag "? What is that about?

I added a " tables " tag to the thread.

Tagging is good in  GG (web version). Very helpful when you search later. 
Your major search tag should likely be " tables ".

This gets it at the moment: GG search on author & subject 

.

Best wishes
TT 

On Monday, 9 September 2019 21:01:41 UTC+2, Alan Aldrich wrote:
>
> Greetings All, I am a long time fan of TiddlyWiki but new to the 
> community. First and foremost, I would like to thank Jeremy for creating 
> TiddlyWiki and everyone who supports it. As a way to learn the ins and outs 
> of TiddlyWiki I started a "table builder" plugin that I have been gradually 
> improving in my spare time. I finally got around to finishing it up 
> recently and would like to share it with the community. 
>
> The ability for the entire wiki to import/export to/from a spreadsheet is 
> a fascinating feature of TiddlyWiki, and I wanted to build on that strength 
> by creating a simple way to query data in the wiki and display it in a 
> tabular way. I am calling it TiddlyTables. The following link contains 
> installation instructions and examples:
>
> http://tiddlytables.tiddlyspot.com/
>
> There is also a "task manager" plugin that can be downloaded. Its primary 
> purpose is to demonstrate the features of TiddlyTables. I look forward to 
> hearing from you. I will do my best to answer questions and I appreciate 
> any feedback. 
>
> Thanks,
> Alan Aldrich
>

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Re: [tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread TiddlyTweeter
TonyM wrote:
>
> I do have a possibly faulty distant memory of a tiddlywiki writing to a 
> Google sheet.
>

I *think* Mat did that ... hang-on ... 
yes: https://groups.google.com/d/msg/tiddlywiki/QcTOJCVXkDw/kS5VBW0ACQAJ

It uses Google Forms & Spreadsheets.

Best
TT

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Re: [tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread TonyM
Jeremy

I do have a possibly faulty distant memory of a tiddlywiki writing to a Google 
sheet. I found it curious but it had no use case for me at the time. I will see 
if I can find anything.

We are spoilt for choice in some ways yet I feel we need to remove a few speed 
humps.

Regards
Tony 

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[tw5] Best approach for multiple wikis

2019-12-02 Thread Victor Dorneanu
Hi everyone, 

what I want to achieve is to have multiple wikis for each "area" of 
knowledge. Let's say:


   - coding
   - notes (from books, articles etc.)
   - cooking recipes
   - etc.


I like to manage my tiddlers at a single place, that means: Have everything 
inside a big (git) repository. However, when I want to share/publish my 
content I'd like to have multiple files for each knowledge area:


   - coding.html (for coding)
  - everything that is tagged with "coding" or has coding as a parent 
  tag
  - notes.html (for notes)
  - everything that is tagged with "notes" or has coding as a parent tag
   - and so forth


For every published wiki I'd like to also have a different welcome page and 
perhaps different style (CSS) customizations. 

I came across this Github issue thread 
 where Tobi Beer 
(awesome work BTW!) presented some dirty implementation 
 of a "monolithic" based multiple 
wiki approach. Without going into details of current discussion regarding 
that topic: What would be the most easiest way to achieve what I've 
described before?

Thanks in advance.


Greetings, 
Victor 

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[tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread mauloop
Why not to reuse Tiddlyweb/Tiddlyspace work? 

   - It has MySQL backend
   - It is multiuser and allows concurrent editing
   - It has public and private spaces
   - It uses the standard Node.js sync-adaptor
   - It works with TWC as well

IMO it is a great piece of software. Not easy to set up. I did it on a 
local VM just to give it a try and Chris kindly helped me to solve some 
problems I fell into. I always feel bad when I see that good software falls 
into oblivion. Maybe it is not to be taken as is, but it could be a good 
starting point. Just to not reinvent the wheel.

Another thought is... this is an old paradigm. PMario's suggestion (DAT 
protocol) goes one step beyond, moving towards the p2p paradigm. I use 
Syncthing to keep my devices synced. Both (DAT and Syncthing, which, I 
think, uses QUIC behind the scenes) provides versioning, encryption and, 
last but not least, ... privacy!

TWedereation goes this direction too, isn't it?

I have no much developing skills to contribute, but I would be happy to 
help testing if needed.

)+(

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[tw5] Re: [TW5] New Plugin: BobSaver, using Bob as a saver for single file wikis

2019-12-02 Thread Jed Carty
Mark,

The message about the key is the generic message for when the server 
responds with a status of 200 but says that the save wasn't successful. So 
it is probably not the key in your case, I am hoping that the key is the 
most common reason the saving doesn't work.

it looks like you are correct about the space being the problem, I didn't 
think to handle uri encoding, I will add that and try to push out a new 
version of Bob with that updated soon.

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Re: [tw5] Re: Taking Node Server to the next level

2019-12-02 Thread Jeremy Ruston
There have been quite a few experimental syncadaptors over the years. Some of 
them come back from a simple GitHub search:

https://github.com/search?q=syncadaptor

I went through the first couple of pages and found:

* an old syncadaptor for CouchDB: https://github.com/cjxgm/tearly/
* a syncadaptor for GitHub: https://ustuehler.github.io/tw5-github/ 
* another old syncadaptor for GitHub: 
https://github.com/kpe/tw5-github-syncadaptor/
* a syncadaptor for SoLID linked data stores (see https://solid.mit.edu/): 
https://github.com/linonetwo/solid-tiddlywiki-syncadaptor

Another syncadaptor that I'd love to see is one that stores tiddlers in an 
online Google Sheet. Done right, one would be able to seamlessly switch between 
editing the same data within TiddlyWiki and via the Google Sheet user interface.

Best wishes

Jeremy

--
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jer...@jermolene.com
https://jermolene.com

> On 2 Dec 2019, at 07:29, Jed Carty  wrote:
> 
> 
> It is stored locally on the hard drive like other node wikis, the difference 
> is that this is stored in some database files instead of individual tiddler 
> files. It is not localStorage or a browser based solution.
> 
> If you use the browser based version of pouchdb it is generally built on top 
> of indexeddb or websql which are just localStorage. It doesn't have any 
> magical fixes and isn't any more persistent than the localstorage plugin. In 
> browser it is just localStorage with a slightly different interface and data 
> model on top of it.
> 
> To put this online you would end up just duplicating noteself I think.
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