Mohammad,

I considered this path for my learning tiddlywiki edition. Basically I 
created a tiddler containing every regular tiddler then generated a link to 
access it https://tiddlywiki.com/#HelloThere all you need to do it prefix 
every tiddler name with https://tiddlywiki.com/# to construct the link You 
could place this path in a tiddler field, in a tiddler that contains a list 
of tiddler names for each wiki.

A quick brainstorm

The above would work well for reference back to tiddlywiki.com because the 
title is often enough info in the titles, however you could also construct 
a link to open tiddly wiki.com with the search string you started with.

I favor the use of titles and a keyword field to intentionally name the 
keywords and being able to do a keyword only search, ie you design tiddlers 
to state exactly which keywords are relevant in addition to the title.

However if we wanted to get tricky we may be able to capture and extract 
the indexes that tiddlywiki builds internally for performance, but allow 
them, to be packaged and dropped into another wiki.

A more sophisticated approach would be to generate a serial number of every 
tiddler, then every word you find is recorded and given its own serial 
number, then you generate a list of every word found and list the tiddlers 
in which it occurs, by recording the tiddler serial number against the word 
serial number. A special search could then use this database to all 
tiddlers containing one or more words and give you a link to it.

This makes me wonder if we could use a compression technique that we could 
still search within.

More simply we could generate a kind of usable site index for wikis, which 
can be copied into another wiki, if the search finds an item in that index 
you know within which wiki it resides.

It may be possible to open a wiki in an iframe and feed the search string 
into the window once you identify the wiki in which the keyword belongs.

Regards
Tony



On Tuesday, January 28, 2020 at 4:14:46 PM UTC+11, Mohammad wrote:
>
>
>    - Tiddlywiki is great at small to moderate number of tiddlers
>    - It is easier to keep few subjects in a Tiddlywiki, for example a 
>    student can have one wiki per course
>       - I see Tiddlywiki like a MsWord file but with tons of features and 
>       suprior flexibility
>       - I see Tiddlywiki as a webpage, but simple to create, customize 
>       and use
>       - I see Tiddlywiki as a database
>    - RESULT
>       - People using Tiddlywiki have several separate Tiddlywiki
>    - ISSUE
>       - Searching and finding something gets difficult and makes headache
>    
>
> One solution
>
>    - create a master Tiddywiki or a main wiki
>    - use a dataTiddler per wiki to index few fields per tiddler like 
>    tiddler titles, caption and keywords field
>    - put all these indexes in the master Tiddlywiki
>    - Use the standard or advanced search to look in these indexes and 
>    return a link to the correct wiki
>
> Howto
>
>    - a simple script to create or update the index in the wiki
>    - export the updated index to master wiki
>
> I know about Twedration, but this is a simple solution for whom use single 
> html Tiddlywiki.
>
>
>    1. What do you think?
>    2. Have you seen such solution before?
>    3. Can you share any tools, idea?
>
> --Mohammad
>

-- 
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/5e6fa555-7728-43df-877c-fcbeab8bfbd6%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to