Michaelsy, Thanks for sharing. I will consider your case example at length tomorrow. The first thing that comes to mind is using a template and a single tiddler for each html page.
Regards Tony On Saturday, July 4, 2020 at 10:04:50 PM UTC+10, Michaelsy wrote: > > Ok, my use case: I use TiddlyWiki as a replacement for an HTML editor with > which I always create a single (more less independent) HTLM page. I.e. one > TiddlyWiki file = one single HTML page. (At least I am currently checking > if this is a reasonable way for me). > > This page is a part of a scrapbook, which basically consists of many > thousands of archived web pages. Within these many pages, there are some > (50?) pages created by myself, where I store notes and my own documentation > on the respective topic. > > (The Scrapbook is built with the Firefox add-on "ScrapBook X" (see: > https://github.com/danny0838/firefox-scrapbook/wiki) ) > > The navigation within the scrapbook is mainly done by a sidebar (including > search functions and some kind of tagging) and links on my own HTML pages. > > Therefore the external links in question are actually internal links. > > And in this use case there is practically no such thing as a context that > could be discarded. And if that should be the case later (if I use > TiddlyWiki more extensively), I can always have the link opened by an > hotkey in another tab. > -- 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 tiddlywiki+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/3780d2fe-7bb9-4753-b0da-69719056de10o%40googlegroups.com.