I just want to say thank you to all of you for your great work. Just was curious about it and tested a usecase with a singlefile tw with bobsaverplugin installed. I used cherrytree and nextcloud with the nextcloud desktop client. The cherrytree-file is a file in the format of a sql-db. This file is lying in my nexcloud folder on my private raspi-nas. I inserted a relative link in a page of cherrytree to a tw-file in another folder of my nextcloud. To make a long story short. On my linux pc: I can open a cherrytree file with some stuff in it, like an index of my used tiddlywikis (lying in my nextcloud) and simply click on the link to open, edit and save the tiddlywiki. On my mobile SurfaceGo-Windows device: I can just do the same.
The big benefit of this scenario is, if you manage to create a singlefile bobserver which runs decently in the background automatically started: You can use whatever file or program you want. Take cherrytree or a simple wordfile with links to a tiddlywiki. It will open with the systemwide installed browser and you can simply work with the tiddlywiki-file without doing, starting or configuring another stuff. You need simple TWs with the bobsaver-plugin in it. You can integrate links to tiddlywiki in every stuff which supports linking to files, for instance bookmarks in the browser should work too as a index. This stands and falls with the implementation of the singlefilewikibobserver as a service in the background of the used system. In the meantime, just a question: Is there even now a way to suppress the opening of the standard browser with a multifile-standard-wiki whenever you invoke a Bobexe-file? -- 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 [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/b8564e71-0b51-4197-91d8-c262faa5c160%40googlegroups.com.

