On Thursday, July 2, 2020 at 11:41:00 AM UTC-7, Eric Shulman wrote:
>
> Adobe PhoneGap (https://phonegap.com/) is a developer utility that can 
> produce apps for Android or iPhone, built from HTML/CSS/Javascript source 
> files (along with any image resources they use).  This is ideal for taking 
> a single-file TiddlyWiki and wrapping it up to be a "native" app for your 
> mobile platform.
>

For Android using Chrome browser (and possibly others), you can just open 
any single-file TiddlyWiki HTML file, and it will run in the mobile Chrome 
browser, just like any other web page.

If you then use the "save to desktop" menu item in Android Chrome, it will 
create an "app" icon directly on your tablet/phone home screen.  When you 
launch from this icon, Chrome opens the HTML in a bare-bones wrapper that 
doesn't include the usual tabs, bookmarks, and URL input controls.  The 
effect is that, except for the standard Android status bar at the top, the 
entire screen shows the TiddlyWiki content... and, if you use the "toggle 
full screen" button from the TW sidebar (see "Tools" tab) then even the 
Android status line disappears and you get *all* of the screen for 
TiddlyWiki display, with *no* extra stuff at all.

One additional note: by default, mobile Chrome doesn't support use of 
drag-and-drop handling (but it does include "pinch zoom" behavior).  
Fortunately, there is a plugin in the TiddlyWiki Official Plugin Library 
that adds standard drag-and-drop handling capability even when using mobile 
Chrome.  Search the plugin library for "mobile" and you will find 
$:/plugins/tiddlywiki/mobiledragdrop.

-e

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