- Interactivity can be as little as responding to a search request, 
   building an index or allowing User Interface customisations. 
   - Unless they have save permissions they can at best save changes in 
   their browser and never commit the change to the website.
      - No spam
   - Unless you are prepared to allow users write to the website you need 
   to build other methods for their changes and feedback to be sent to you.
      - eg generate a file they can email to you.
   - "Bob and Bobexe" offers a multi-user multiple-simultaneous access 
   solution on a per-tiddler basis if you need multiple simultaneous editors.
      - But that is node server based and a little more complex to make it 
      internet facing.
   - I may be wrong but I consider static to also mean all that is active 
   is HTML and Links (thus javascript is not part of it, unless to export 
   supporting javascript) then the site is no longer "static".

I hope that helps "frame the issue". 
Tones
On Sunday, 27 December 2020 at 05:32:42 UTC+11 [email protected] wrote:

> Re-reading your email here. I think one issue I'm having is that I don't 
> expect much, if any, interaction on my existing static sites. Wikis are, by 
> definition, interactive! So if you post your wiki publicly and someone 
> makes a change or an addition, how do you capture the new information back 
> to your other copies of the wiki? Also how do you prevent spam?
>
> On Friday, December 18, 2020 at 10:13:34 PM UTC-6 TW Tones wrote:
>
>> I think you are perhaps missing the point of a static site. 
>>
>> Sure you could redesign the way the static site export works but the TOC 
>> internal nav uses macros and widgets that are not active in a static site 
>> by definition.
>>
>> Why are you using a static site?
>>
>> My personal interest is a static site where all static pages links are to 
>> the tiddlers full wiki, with a splash screen to warn of loading.
>>
>>    - The static site would then have static tiddler files for search 
>>    engines etc... but as soon as you need interactive features it loads the 
>>    full wiki.
>>    - You could generate a static html tiddler from your  TOC internal 
>>    nav then export that. Keeping in mind it becomes static ie does not 
>> respond 
>>    to interactive code.
>>    - It may be possible to generate a site index and robots file to 
>>    support single file wikis without a need to export a static site.
>>
>> Regards
>> Tones
>> On Saturday, 19 December 2020 at 12:25:55 UTC+11 [email protected] wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> My local TW uses toc-tabbed-internal-nav and each section expands when 
>>> clicked. But if I export the site, nothing expands when clicked, so all the 
>>> sub-tiddlers are inaccessible.
>>>
>>> Do I need to do something special with the export code?
>>>
>>

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