I wrote a static blog exporter several years back for TW

explanation of it here: 
http://welford.github.io/twstaticblog/example/example.html
which itself exports to:
http://welford.github.io/twstaticblog/example/blog-styled/index.html
and 
http://welford.github.io/twstaticblog/example/blog-basic/index.html

i also use it for my personal blog here http://www.phasersonkill.com/ 

The thing is pretty flexible once you have it setup, most of what you want 
could be achieved. " a sort of carousel widget with single sections from 
the book, with arrows left and right to flip through them." might require a 
little extra work though.

On Saturday, 12 June 2021 at 14:45:19 UTC+1 TW Tones wrote:

> As much as I value WordPress my personal belief is tiddlywiki would  be 
> ideal, I would start with others book style wikis to get going. 
>
> I understand the value of static websites for search may be valuable 
> however the interactive wiki offers much more. The compromise would be a 
> static site on which every page link opens  the interactive wiki, add a 
> splash screen to inform them you are loading the whole book for easy search.
>
> I started building a template to support this but not completed it yet. 
> Hopefully someone has done it and can share a revised template for its 
> export. 
> If you can serve a node implementation securely on the internet would be 
> better and it can automatically serve both static and interactive content. 
>
> By the way 70,000 words with an average length 490,000 characters, Not 
> even half a Megabyte is trivial, I have happily used 6-12Mb single file 
> wikis without any concern.
>
> Tones
>
> On Friday, 11 June 2021 at 23:03:06 UTC+10 [email protected] wrote:
>
>> Hello!
>>
>> As much as I love TiddlyWiki and think it could work for your use cases, 
>> I feel I would be remiss to not point out another option: *WordPress*
>>
>>
>>
>> On Friday, June 11, 2021 at 7:37:42 AM UTC-4 David Gifford wrote:
>>
>>> Hi Kosmaton
>>>
>>> You could use TiddlyWiki in node.js, and export and upload tiddlers to 
>>> your free webhosting service as static htmls, no database needed. With some 
>>> CSS, you could design it as you wish, in a way that it doesn't look 
>>> TiddlyWiki-ish, and there are plugins to make the layout mobile-friendly. 
>>> The book page, home page and news page are all doable. The book page could 
>>> be handled with details elements (HTML, not the details widget plugin) and 
>>> transclusions. So yes, everything you mentioned can be done.
>>>
>>> Alternately, you could do the same with a regular standalone TW uploaded 
>>> to your free webhosting service. Doing it as a standalone means the opening 
>>> page would not load as quickly as a small static html page, but most people 
>>> wouldn't notice the difference, and it would give you many more options for 
>>> how to handle the book page, for example the table of contents feature in 
>>> TiddlyWiki.
>>>
>>> What might not work, though I may be wrong, is having a user comments 
>>> section, but then you did not mention that. I know there is at least one 
>>> user comments plugin, but I haven't played with it.
>>>
>>> On Thursday, June 10, 2021 at 3:28:54 PM UTC-5 Kosmaton wrote:
>>>
>>>> Hello Tiddly people,
>>>>  
>>>> I'm meaning to create a new website, and I'd like to ask your opinion 
>>>> whether TiddlyWiki is the right tool (or one of the tools) for it.
>>>>  
>>>> I used to have a pre-TW5 site on TiddlySpace back in the day. I'm 
>>>> semi-programming-and-webdesign-literate, in an ad hoc and rusty way. No 
>>>> experience with databases unfortunately, which may be relevant.
>>>>  
>>>> The website I have in mind would be a combination of a non-fiction book 
>>>> (already written, but expandable/changeable), and an associated blog. The 
>>>> book is organized as a big tree of numbered paragraphs/sections: 1, 1.1, 
>>>> 1.1.1, 1.2, 2, 2.1 etc. These sections frequently refer to one another; 
>>>> it's a hypertext in itself.
>>>>  
>>>> * The site would mainly need to have:
>>>>  
>>>> 1) a page that displays the book, with a Table of Contents.
>>>>   - The TOC should be hideable as a whole.
>>>>   - The branches of the TOC should be collapsible, i.e. click on 1 to 
>>>> show 1.1 and 1.2, click again to hide them, etc.
>>>>   - It may be excessive to load all the text of the book (all the 
>>>> sections) into the viewport (some 70,000 words). But it would be nice if 
>>>> the reader saw a bit more than just the section they're currently reading. 
>>>> Basically a pdf-reader-like experience would be good.
>>>>   - optional: Sections of the book may get revisions, and the visitor 
>>>> should be able to see the revisions. (This would probably get a lot more 
>>>> complicated if I want to allow for reordering, deletion and creation of 
>>>> sections...)
>>>>   - The book currently exists as a LibreOffice Writer .odt file, with 
>>>> sections actually organized as headings. Ideally I'd like to automate the 
>>>> process of getting them into the TiddlyWiki.
>>>>  
>>>> 2) a blog/news page
>>>>   - Blog posts are expected to regularly contain links to book 
>>>> sections, or entire transcluded sections.
>>>>   - Posts must be able to acommodate audio files; a regular HTML <audio 
>>>> controls> seems sufficient.
>>>>  
>>>> 3) a Home page that could e.g. display
>>>>   - the most recent blog post (truncated if necessary)
>>>>   - a sort of carousel widget with single sections from the book, with 
>>>> arrows left and right to flip through them. These sections could be either 
>>>> randomly taken from the whole book, or from a hand-picked subset of 
>>>> sections (which I should be able to adjust).
>>>>  
>>>> * The thing really ought to be 'responsive', i.e. look fine on small 
>>>> screens too. This might not be obvious for something like the TOC.
>>>>  
>>>> * Towards the visitor it should not present a very TiddlyWikish face. 
>>>> I'm keen to acknowledge/praise/recommend TW in the About page; but the 
>>>> casual visitor should not focus on the underlying tech.
>>>>  
>>>> * I don't intend to have a server of my own. The free webhost I've 
>>>> happily used before allows for up to 2 databases, with a choice between 
>>>> "5.7-MySQL . 10.5-MariaDB . 13.2-PgSQL".
>>>>  
>>>> So:
>>>>  
>>>> Does this sound feasible with TW5 as a base? (Or would you suggest some 
>>>> other framework? If it's /challenging/ with TW, but /easy&fun/ with XYZ, 
>>>> I'd like to hear about XYZ too! :)
>>>>  
>>>> How would I set this up as far as server / databases etc. go?
>>>>  
>>>> If I go ahead with this, there's bound to be more detailed questions 
>>>> regarding the functionalities mentioned above; but if you already see any 
>>>> immediate solutions (plugins, say) please shout.
>>>>  
>>>> Apologies for the length of this post. I don't expect anyone to figure 
>>>> all this out for me, but any thoughts are very welcome. Many thanks in 
>>>> advance!
>>>>  
>>>> K.
>>>>
>>>

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