Post Script,

In this example note how I have an "optional toc" below the research 
tiddler. This could be changes to allow the content of a child tiddler or 
its title, to be dragged back into the tiddler it was split from.

What I am trying to say, your solution is so powerful it can stand on its 
own, then build the additional functionality over the top. This makes t 
simpler and allows components to be swapped in and out.

Imagine if I pasted text that was automatically spit into child tiddlers 
and they were listed in the left TOC, a little more design trickery could 
achieve a lot. Like not expanding the children if named in the current 
tiddler.


[image: Snag_3cf366b4.png]

TonyM


On Wednesday, June 3, 2020 at 12:12:07 PM UTC+10, TonyM wrote:
>
> Mark,
>
> Your original idea is of great value. I am wondering if you should 
> complete it, a Minimum Viable and see of other methods can add the 
> additional functionality you seek.
>
> If your original idea was made into a custom view template in this example 
> here;
>
>
> This is only a friendly suggestion. 
>
> I am playing with a version of toc internal nav. This actually provides 
> the outline, the following tools could quickly support the other features 
> you are looking for.
>
>    - The tag pills allow reordering
>    - Its easy to expand an collapse the tree
>    - We can reduce the complexity of the view template, perhaps even no 
>    toolbar
>
>
> [image: Snag_3cecda4f.png]
> Regards Tony
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tuesday, June 2, 2020 at 1:25:46 PM UTC+10, Mark S. wrote:
>>
>>
>> It's starting to look more outliney. The process of deciding changing 
>> behaviour by level leaves all sorts of paragraph breaks, which I haven't 
>> completely discovered how to deal with yet. 
>>
>>
>>
>> On Monday, June 1, 2020 at 10:55:03 AM UTC-7, Mark S. wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> One of my intended goals is to bring outlining capability in some 
>>> fashion to TW.
>>>
>>> I think ... I hope ... I've got the logic working. Well, the logic for 
>>> folding/hiding.
>>>
>>> The screenshot below may not look very much like an outliner, but it 
>>> shows the fundamental logic is working. Each item can have an outline level 
>>> of 1 to 5 (arbitrary, but who looks at anything below 5?). The F checkbox 
>>> means folded. Items with a lower number above them (where a lower number 
>>> means higher in the outline tree) are hidden if the item above them is 
>>> folded. The big clumsy unfold symbol means every thing below is 
>>> folded/hidden.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>

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