Anne the theme you are using for your website is so clean

any chance you have one similar but dark mode?

On Sunday, April 26, 2020 at 10:27:33 PM UTC+3, Anne-Laure Le Cunff wrote:
>
> Hi Joshua,
>
> Welcome to the community! I use TiddlyBlink myself and it's doing an 
> amazing job so far.
>
> In terms of themes, here are some that were recently shared:
>
> - http://j.d.tiddlyspot.com/
> - http://j.d.simplemobile.tiddlyspot.com/
> - http://j.d.material.tiddlyspot.com/
> - http://j.d.search.tiddlyspot.com/ 
> - http://j.d.whitespace.tiddlyspot.com/
>
> I hope that helps!
>
> On Sunday, April 26, 2020 at 6:31:47 PM UTC+1, Peter Buyze wrote:
>>
>> Joshua,
>>
>> Welcome to the TiddlyWiki community. I am a newbie myself, and have for 
>> the last 5 years been taking notes and trying to set up a Zettelkasten. I 
>> did not find the right app that fully satisfied me, mainly because I found 
>> that simply linking notes was not enough to get a sort of dialogue with the 
>> Zettelkasten, as the Zk father Niklas Luhmann used to say.
>>
>> I rediscovered TiddlyWiki a couple of weeks ago, having sniffed at it a 
>> few years ago and ran away screaming. This time, however, after 
>> familiarising myself a tiny bit more with HTML, I fell in love with the 
>> tool. Without exaggeration I would say it is probably by far one of the 
>> best, if not THE best tool for a Zk.
>>
>> The only drawback from my side is that, like your friend, I am still a 
>> stranger to HTML, that is to say, to the scripting/coding part of it. 
>> Scripting/coding (I am not even sure what to call it) are important with TW 
>> if you want to make full use of this incredibly flexible and varied tool. 
>> Having said that, there are also many plug-ins to extend its functionality, 
>> so for my purposes I am more or less, almost, where I need to be.
>>
>> I cannot answer your 2 specific questions, but can confirm that this 
>> forum is an extremely good, helpful, and friendly one, and for someone like 
>> you with HTML experience you will learn a lot and get a lot of pleasure out 
>> of it.
>>
>> BTW I useTiddlyBlink and installed the toolmap (= like TiddlyRoam, if I 
>> am not mistaken), which is an unbeatable Zk combination.
>> Good luck, and enjoy!!
>> Peter
>>
>> -- 
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>>
>> 26 Apr 2020, 20:09 by [email protected]:
>>
>> Hi! I'm new to Tiddlywiki. My coding background involves some coding 
>> experience (I used to code and network for Building Management Solutions 
>> involving HVAC/Lighting Control/Security) but very little by way of HTML. 
>> I'm also new to Tiddlywiki. So, please treat me like a child. 
>>
>> My interests are research. My friend, who has a PhD in philosophy, and I 
>> research together in the hope of writing books on philosophy and theology. 
>> Specifically, for any ners out there, I'm interested in Thomistic 
>> Philosophy, Speculative History, and ethics within technology. I also work 
>> a lot with Hermeneutics and basic apologetic subjects, such as the Kalam, 
>> Historical case for Ressurrection, ect.
>>
>> I say all that because I've been trying to get together a note taking 
>> system with a few goals in mind. 
>>
>> 1. A place where all notes on all subjects, even my bread making 
>> obsession, can be placed.
>>
>> 2. A place where those notes are not locked by hierarchical limitations 
>> but can "interact" with one another. A big part of my interest in writing 
>> is taking two seemingly unconnected subjects and connecting them in new 
>> ways. I think that's one of the essential skills all philosophers need to 
>> develop. If all of my thoughts are then able to be logically connected in 
>> long chains of thoughts which can be later followed up and fleshed out in a 
>> chapter, that is very useful. 
>>
>> 3. The ability to collaborate. Not only do I want my thoughts to collide 
>> with each other but I want to "accidentally" bump into my friend's thoughts 
>> and whoever else might join. This also forces this to be completely on the 
>> cloud. 
>>
>> 4. User friendly. My friend is not very technical. He is an incredibly 
>> creative thinker, as his dissertation which synthesized a huge amount of 
>> thought shows, but he is not analytical like myself. So, I need something 
>> user friendly. 
>>
>> Right now I'm thinking that TiddlyRoam or TiddlyBlink will be the best 
>> fit for me. I do have a few questions though. 
>>
>> 1. How do I change the styling? Are there themes I can easily embed in 
>> the code? Back in the day I used to code CSS and HTML for personal pages, 
>> though I've gotten away from that. Any experience with these specific 
>> distributions of the Tiddlywiki platform as far as style? I'd like to stay 
>> away from plugins and just change the HTML file permanently. 
>>
>> 2. Any experiences or thoughts? I just found Tiddlywiki yesterday after 
>> taking with an IT friend of mine about my goals. So my knowledge base is 
>> very limited. 
>>
>> Thanks in advance. This platform is incredibly exciting. I don't want to 
>> use Roam as I want to own my thoughts so the work you all are doing is 
>> incredibly useful. 
>>
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>>
>>
>>

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