Yes that would be fun — but not great for SEO purposes, which is a big 
advantage of static websites vs native TiddlyWiki :) To make your content 
easily indexable by search engines you need one page = one piece of 
content, with its own title, body, and unique metadata. Also, if your wiki 
is text only, the number of pages doesn't really matter on most free 
hosting services like GitHub pages or Netlify.

On Wednesday, April 22, 2020 at 11:12:15 AM UTC+1, Mat wrote:
>
> Anne-Laure Le Cunff wrote:
>>
>> For a static website, I think it's better to have one page = one tiddler, 
>> but good to know there's also this quick option!
>>
>
> Apropos
>
> ...I did some experimenting a while back, having multiple tiddlers in a 
> static page but using css tricks to only show specific tiddlers per user 
> clicks. IMO this is worth exploring further since it is simpler to serve a 
> single file than many, e.g on various free hosting servers.
>
> <:-)
>

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