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. >>> >>> >>> >>> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/9a973177-fa26-47e1-b2c6-5cc6b92fa5ea%40googlegroups.com.

