Jake,

In a simple html page an anchor is defined and links to the anchor moves 
you to that part of the page, such as a heading. They are a kind of 
internal link.

Now if you stop to think about it tiddlywiki has a lot of features about 
internal links, it open tiddlers, and executes buttons and a lot more, all 
in the same page.

As a result the anchor method is used in the way tiddlywikis page works and 
the standard simple anchor is not easily available, however people have 
found tricks, workarounds and even better alternative solutions. The answer 
is not strait forward.

However as it often the case here is if you try and ask what you want from 
tiddlywiki, functionally, rather than ask a question with a partial 
solution eg an anchor is a "method to an end" not "an end in itself" like 
try this "Is there a way to get links to jump to a heading in a long 
tiddler?" you are far more likely to get the answer you seek.

Regards
Tony



On Monday, July 6, 2020 at 9:19:01 PM UTC+10, Jake wrote:
>
> ARIA (Accessible Rich Internet Applications) is a way to help people with 
>> disabilities to process a page:  
>> https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Accessibility/ARIA
>> An `aria-label` will describe the element to, for instance, a screen 
>> reader.
>>
>
> Well, then I guess that is not an "anchor". (◑‿◐) 
>
> sooooo... what's the anchor then?  
>

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