I had already looked at it... It doesn't help me so much as I wished. Just take at example. one of the first interesting see we can see on the default tiddler is tsort. Not much told' no link provided. So I type "tsort" in the search query, and can have to 3 tiddlers incorporating tsort in their names. The examples provided don't tell much, and not any indication of the purpose.
I would gladly like to help make for a better documentation if you agree... This is time consuming, but this would reduce my own time trying to figure out things (or giving up altogether and being back to nowhere). cheers. -- Jean-Pierre Le jeudi 29 avril 2021 à 00:44:00 UTC+2, [email protected] a écrit : > Yes. This is exactly why I wrote JsonMangler (the "Manger" part came from > one of the core features that has been downplayed, the ability to compress > multi-level Json into a 1 level deep object with "path":"value" pairs. The > path syntax is "/" to be consistent with the "system tiddler" naming > convention in TW. > > The current demo wiki/docs are located here: > https://chronicles.wiki/TW5-JsonMangler/ > > You can use "index-path syntax" in any existing filter or widget. (Note: > Stable on 5.1.23, I have not tested against the recent pre-release). > > Mahalo (thanks) for trying my plugin! > > Best, > Joshua Fontany > On Wednesday, April 28, 2021 at 8:42:01 AM UTC-7 Mark S. wrote: > >> <$list filter="[[mydata]getindex[0/age]]"/> >> >> (assuming JSON mangler) >> >> On Wednesday, April 28, 2021 at 8:02:14 AM UTC-7 [email protected] >> wrote: >> >>> How can I access json data in a smart way when my code is not in the >>> context of a button-started action (which I call action mode)? >>> >>> say this simple text of my "data" tiddler: >>> ----------------- >>> [ >>> { "captain": "Hook", "age": "42" }, >>> { "captain": "Planet", "age": "37" } >>> ] >>> >>> the indexes filter returns 0 and 1. >>> >>> with get[0] I would get { "captain": "Hook", "age": "42" } >>> >>> I can't get[0/name] to get "Hook". >>> >>> IS there a plugin or any other mean to get: >>> - the names of the fileds within any json objects? >>> - getting any values from json with a syntax like that I give, or even a >>> more ambitious xpath query? >>> >>> I have installed json mangler. but I have no docs about it, not even >>> knowing what it really does besides providing a bar for json tiddlers? >>> >>> regards. >>> >>> -- >>> Jean-Pierre >>> >> -- 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 [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/6603b10a-6b5f-4d9f-a3e0-0b7112dd213an%40googlegroups.com.

