I'm thinking of making a TW that summarizes a course I recently took and 
could potentially act as a clinical guide to practitioners as they practice 
/ work.  

If I view it as a complete entity with no more editing to be done I could 
just distribute the TW file and be done with it.

If however I intend for the user to modify their file and save changes that 
adds complexity to the user experience with the user suddenly having to 
either figure 
out how to modify their browser to save changes or at least know to go to 
the downloads folder to use the most recently saved version.


Is there currently any way to make a TW that can be given to a complete 
novice that allows them to make changes and not have to step out of the "TW 
experience"
any further than just double-clicking the file to open it up again?  I 
would imagine maybe a way to bundle a tiddlywikidesktop instance with it as 
"the program that runs TW",
but I don't know how easy that would be on Mac or Windows (as I'm on Linux 
and the install is more complicated than just "open this file with this 
program")


Thanks,

- Dave

-- 
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/8df66d57-7fe3-4789-8e92-f28caafdbdf9%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to