Alex,

This is a very good idea, I have done this in the past but not with 
tiddlywiki.

I have done things like this professionally such as migrating file shares 
to sharepoint,  and its actually quite complex. The Question here is not 
what tiddlywiki can do but what do you need to do to make the data 
available to put into tiddlywiki or anywhere that will satisfy the business 
requirements. I can be engaged professionally but a few incomplete tips;

   - TiddlyWIki may not have access to local content if accessed in the 
   browser, but it does in TiddlyDesktop
   - Does it need local access? not necessarily, you just need to import 
   the required data
   - The name, file type, and location can be easily listed into a file 
   using your operating system, you would have to do this again to capture 
   updates. I don't think this would help that much because you can only 
   search based on filename and folder names.
   - Perhaps what you see on the shared server is not what others see, 
   consider discussing this with the server administrator, perhaps start with 
   the requirements rather than mentioning tiddlywiki as a possible solution.
   - There are dedicated indexing tools that look inside documents as well 
   to improve search, some may already exist in your environment.
   - An informal index of folders with search keywords according to in 
   house practices that determine where to place documents may be a quick win, 
   but it needs to become part of the process in the organisation to maintain 
   it. Although maintenance can be automated.

Large volumes of documents belong in a Document management system rather 
than on such shared drives and folders. However In my own research I see 
tiddlywiki may one day be a smart document that travels with its own 
document management system.

Best of luck
Tony

On Sunday, April 12, 2020 at 11:29:09 AM UTC+10, Alex Olsen wrote:
>
> I'm very new to the Tiddlywiki community. To learn the platform as 
> completely as possible, I'm doing a project for work. Smart, right?
>
> I'm in the training department. We have a bunch of stuff we need regular 
> access to. Other stuff we need less frequent access to. Some stuff we need 
> desperately once in a blue moon. Due to the nature of the previous file 
> management system (lets make a folder) it's impossible to find what you 
> need. My intent is to use the wiki framework to help tag documents and give 
> instructions for their use.
>
> The difficult part is how many files are on the shared server (drive? I 
> don't know a lot about networking). Is there a handy way to automate any 
> part of this process? To break it down, each file we need is in a maze of 
> folders. I'd like to set this up with as much automation as possible. I 
> have a few ideas, but don't know if Tiddlywiki has the ability to look 
> through the files around it. That's a feature most of my automation ideas 
> would require.
>
> First step is going to be making a list of the files that need sorting. 
> All I'd really need are name, file type, and location. Then we'd set up 
> some sort of database with that info and call on that database for partial 
> Tiddler Population. Something like a transcluded bit of code that prints 
> the info from the database above a description text the user enters.
>
> Is my rough plan feasible? If so, what resources would you point me 
> towards?
>

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