Hi, Richard, Great tips!
I'm still digesting your tips for structuring Tiddlers. They seem very well thought out. Do you have any comments on your work process? How do you manage references? How do you manage connections to PDFs or other reference documents? How do you export from TiddlyWiki for final printing /publication? Thanks, Neil On Dec 31, 10:31 am, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi All > I wrote my dissertation in Wordperfect... both times since a virus > wiped it out the first time :( > > I use TW now for organizing my classes - tiddlers tagged "Week01", > "Week 02"... display other tiddlers tagged "Week01 LectureNotes", > "Week01 HandOuts", "Week01 ReqReadings"... This way, I can see each > week's materials by looking at that week's tiddler, or use > ForEachTiddler statements to see all readings, handouts, or lecture > notes in one place... I put my notes in tiddlers so I can also search > for specific terms and find which lecture included them, or cross link > things like definitions of a term to any place I use it. > > I think this would translate to dissertations easily. > 1) Create tiddlers tagged for the dissertation sections ("Abstract" > "Chapter01", "Methodology" etc...) and have them display other > tiddlers tagged "Chapter01 MyTasks" "Chapter01 ToRead", and "Chapter01 > UsedRefs" followed by your writing for that chapter (in a tiddler is > possible... but that may be taking it too far... or a link to the doc > file you are writing it in). Keep in mind that the tiddler titles > could be whatever you wanted them to be, and so could be more > descriptive... but naming them to match these tags would make it > easier to use templates and pass $1 and $2 variables... > > 2) "MyTasks" could be > either a bullet list of "next actions" in GTD terms for that chapter, > like get an article, talk to your chair about something, email a > researcher somewhere with a question... > or a ForEachTiddler 'ed list of anything tagged "Chapter01 MyTasks", > meaning a tiddler for each task, which would give you a place to put > notes about the conversation with your chair or a place to include a > copy of the email exchange with the other researcher... > or both - a short list of one step tasks followed by the > ForEachTiddler statement for only the things that needed notes... > > Keep in mind you could add a "Done" tag to tasks after they were done, > as well as add a "Pending" tag to tasks needing later follow up > action. You would then use three ForEachTiddler statments > --one to show all tiddlers tagged MyTasks but NOT Pending and NOT Done > to see current actions > --one to show all tiddlers tagged MyTasks AND Pending and NOT Done to > show those needing follow up or reminding > --one to show all tiddlers tagged MyTasks AND Pending AND Done to show > your notes on tasks > > 3) "ToRead" could list articles and chapters to read, > either as a single tiddler that just had a bullet point list > or as a tiddler with a ForEachTidder statement that showed every > tiddler tagged "Chapter01 ToRead MyNotes". The tiddlers tagged this > way would have the properly formed reference (without any hard returns > in it) as the first line, a blank line or two, and then your notes > below... you could add a link to the pdf for the resource too. These > tiddlers should be named "Lastname - Whatever" where Lastname is the > author's last name and Whatever is your description of the resource. > > 4) Once you decided to use an article or chapter in your dissertation, > change the tags for the tiddler for that resource to "Chapter01 > UsedRefs". The ForEachTiddler documentation has an example of how to > list all tiddlers tagged a certain way, and return the first line of > text from the tiddler. At the end of your "Chapter01" tiddler... or > in a References tiddler... include a ForEachTiddler statement that > returns the first line of everything tagged "Chapter01 UsedRefs"... or > just everything tagged UsedRefs... and since they are named with the > author's last name as the first word in the title, an alphabetical > sort (the default) would give you an alphabetical reference list. You > could tinker with the code and have it display the first line as a > clickable link to the tiddler for that resource, or display something > like [[.|tiddlertitle]] at the end of the reference, and so the > reference would not be clickable, but the final period at the end of > it would take you to that reference's tiddler to see your notes and a > link to it... > > Attaching links to documents likely means keeping a local copy of the > TW on your flashdrive, but everything else could be done on tiddlyspot > for example, and you could access your work anywhere you had an > internet connection... and keep a local backup just in case... did I > mention a virus wiped out my dissertation? > > Just some ideas... > Richard -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywiki?hl=en.

