Mohammad

I installed it and dependencies for Pandoc & LaTex and the BetterBibTex 
plugin. Works well!

Its, basically, a featured academic word processor written in JavaScript on 
node, assembled into a self contained executable through Electron.

Though, in many ways, it can be contextualized / compared best with other 
dedicated software like that ... e.g. Nota Bene https://www.notabene.com/

Looking at the features of ZettIr I'm pretty with a clear design and laid 
out you could get very close to it in TW. Perhaps not the full flexibility 
on citation styles, but very close.

I think the issue is that in TW *we don't tend to collectively dedicate to 
"finished apps" by field spec*, rather we tend to work ad-hoc in many 
directions so clear apps are not that numerous.

One exception is "to do" tools. Both ToDoNow & Cardo come close.

*And a recent outstanding exception is the epub reader which is extremely 
good at showing what a few skilled people working together can achieve in a 
polished dedicated application ..*. 
https://groups.google.com/d/msg/tiddlywiki/_VLufc4Svp8/jALzYZ09BAAJ

Best wishes
TT

Mohammad wrote:
>
> With Zettlr, writing professional texts is easy and motivating: Whether 
> you are a college student, a researcher, a journalist, or an author — 
> Zettlr has the right tools for you. Watch the video 
> <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BJ27r6YGpAs> or continue reading to see 
> what they are!
>
> https://github.com/Zettlr/Zettlr
>
>
> I believe we can do all these stuffs with Tiddlywiki? What do you think?
>

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