For those interested I have updated my previously published Playground,
with a few changes
- It is now a 5.1.23 Version release with Autosave disabled and Local
storage enabled.
- It is now a full copy of tiddlywiki.com so you can make use of the
documentation tiddlers during testing.
- You can install plugins from drag and drop or multiple libraries in
the Get more plugins button.
- Then reload if you must and changes will be loaded from Browser
storage, no download or save needed.
- Use it as a playground but do not depend on your changes remaining in
the browser memory forever.
Go and have a play now with the great new features of the new version.
https://anthonymuscio.github.io/playground.html
On Sunday, 27 December 2020 at 14:59:56 UTC+11 TW Tones wrote:
> *Slug handling;*
>
> As I understand it when converting what may otherwise be tiddlers and
> their title to a URL filename slugify converts to a valid HTML filename.
>
> *The ZIP mechanism* allows you create files within a ZIP in TiddlyWiki,
> that can be saved and unzipped in place with the files and folders being
> extracted. Thus we can generate ZIP's with a multitude of files that
> subsequently for a larger set like a website. Eg css and html files.
>
> The art of generating a site is a larger question, start a thread to ask
> for help! Personally I use whole single file wikis on the internet rather
> than "generate static sites", so if you start a thread do say why and what
> you believe the result will be.
>
> Tones
> On Sunday, 27 December 2020 at 13:42:11 UTC+11 [email protected] wrote:
>
>> "Slug handling will allow the generation of html pages and the zip
>> feature to bundle them, perhaps starting a new opportunity for TiddlyWiki
>> to generate sites"
>>
>> Can you expand on that a bit? This is my major pain point at this time,
>> generating a site...
>>
>> On Saturday, December 26, 2020 at 6:22:47 PM UTC-6 TW Tones wrote:
>>
>>> Now I am at my desktop and not crippled by Google Groups on Mobile, I
>>> will chip in and *thank the community* for another important release.
>>>
>>> I have being using and reviewing features on the pre-release for some
>>> time can can assure you all that there are immediate and slow burning
>>> advantages to this new release.
>>>
>>> - With search and replace, toggle and cycle operators it will be
>>> easier to do some everyday actions on tiddler fields and status
>>> handling, I
>>> feel this may take a little time for examples to filter out to the
>>> greater
>>> audience but I also plan to showcase a few just as Mohammad did earlier.
>>> - This also extends to importing and exporting data and text that
>>> tiddlywiki refactors. Combine this with JSON mangler and the world of
>>> data
>>> is ours.
>>> - The power operator now makes it easier to write macros to convert
>>> between number bases eg decimal to hexadecimal
>>> - new filter options will help easier to read filters to be written
>>> and thus understand for those who think its a black art
>>> - The tm-scroll message is going to solve the long sought need to
>>> navigate within tiddler navigation, for those larger tiddlers.
>>> - Allowing modifier keys such as ctrl, alt, meta is a nice way to
>>> increase functionality of buttons and list navigation without any
>>> additional screen real estate
>>> - Slug handling will allow the generation of html pages and the zip
>>> feature to bundle them, perhaps starting a new opportunity for
>>> TiddlyWiki
>>> to generate sites
>>> - Extended date handling, format operator and ancient dates will
>>> help record deep history
>>> - The sortsub operator will allow us to quickly sort on values other
>>> than titles and even computed values.
>>> - The filter and reduce operators introduce some handy ways to sum
>>> or accumulate values across tiddlers.
>>> - The Page and tiddler layout customisation may spark a new period
>>> of alternative layouts, do publish ones you build if possible, and try
>>> and
>>> ensure they cater for basic functions so they can be shared and used
>>> more
>>> widely.
>>>
>>> So I hope you are as excited as me about this release, there are many
>>> new opportunities beyond what I listed above and I do encourage you all to
>>> share some of your experiments.
>>>
>>> Tones
>>>
>>> On Sunday, 27 December 2020 at 06:55:15 UTC+11 [email protected] wrote:
>>>
>>>> Thank you to all involved for the hard work in getting 5.1.23 completed
>>>> and I am glad that TiddlyWiki made it through this difficult year*
>>>> stronger
>>>> as a result.
>>>>
>>>> My favourite feature of TiddlyWiki is the helpful and supportive
>>>> community. That is nothing new but certainly a strong contributor to
>>>> 5.1.23. I thank those helping me learn how to use this swiss-army-knife
>>>> web-tool in new applications.
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>> /Mike
>>>>
>>>> * (understatement of the decade)
>>>> On Thursday, December 24, 2020 at 10:03:06 AM UTC-4 [email protected]
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> I’m delighted to announce that the new v5.1.23 release of TiddlyWiki
>>>>> is now available:
>>>>>
>>>>> https://tiddlywiki.com/
>>>>> https://www.npmjs.com/package/tiddlywiki/v/5.1.23
>>>>>
>>>>> I’ve attached a thumbnail of the release note (
>>>>> https://tiddlywiki.com/#Release%205.1.23) to give a sense of the
>>>>> scale. Usually here I would summarise the key new features, but on this
>>>>> occasion there’s really too many to choose from. So instead I’d like to
>>>>> invite everyone to reply here nominating their favourite feature. And of
>>>>> course please do ask for clarifications if any of the changes aren’t
>>>>> clear.
>>>>>
>>>>> For all of us it’s been a strange year, with much heartbreaking
>>>>> suffering around us. Back in April, I was delighted to get v5.1.22 out as
>>>>> part of a clearing of the decks, just in case anything happened to me. As
>>>>> it’s turned out, despite COVID’s best efforts, but entirely thanks to a
>>>>> very high level of collaboration across the core development team,
>>>>> v5.1.23
>>>>> has been one of the most impressive releases for a long time. I can’t
>>>>> wait
>>>>> to see what we’ll achieve in 2021.
>>>>>
>>>>> I’d like to thank everyone involved with the development, and of
>>>>> course a huge thank you to everyone here who’s time and attention makes
>>>>> this project what it is today. To corrupt an old adage, TiddlyWiki will
>>>>> die
>>>>> when the last person speaks its name. Right now there’s a chorus of
>>>>> voices
>>>>> lifting the project, and let’s hope that will long continue,
>>>>>
>>>>> Best wishes
>>>>>
>>>>> Jeremy
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
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