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? > -- 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/19a0ad03-d755-4355-a95a-854fea35817d%40googlegroups.com.

