On Tuesday, March 3, 2020 at 1:10:14 PM UTC+1, TiddlyTweeter wrote: ... > The issue is the KIND of document. The point about light-weight markup is > precisely to use as little markup as possible so that the text remains > human readable. > Some kinds of document can have incredibly light markup because *the actual > written form already implies its own markup*. >
> For instance, screenplays rely on spacing in the human readable version so > parsers for them use spacing as a primary vector. An example is > https://fountain.io/syntax > <https://www.google.com/url?q=https%3A%2F%2Ffountain.io%2Fsyntax&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNHRFBQCt6LF4MQO0ZJZb-adScS36w> > > I have seen the discussion about fountain.io ... I think this is a completely new tiddler-type, which can be implemented as a plugin and type: text/vnd.fountain or something similar. > which is an elegant space-centric variation on Markdown. > see: https://fountain.io/faq >What exactly is the relationship between Fountain and Markdown? >Fountain, formerly known as Screenplay Markdown, is inspired by John Gruber's super cool Markdown language, and uses some of its conventions, but Fountain is not >Markdown. There's no use in converting Fountain to Markdown or the reverse. Markdown simply pointed the way to a rich but simple experience of creating beautiful, >functional documents using only human-readable plain text. -m -- 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/56dad63b-7eb5-4cc4-978a-727eada79b81%40googlegroups.com.

