Hello,
I used TagCloud from Eric and added a third option to see only my tiddlers:
\define tagcloud_showbytiddler()
<$list filter="[!is[system]tags[]sort[]]">
<$vars count={{{ [<currentTiddler>tagging[]count[]] }}}>
<<tag>>
</$vars>
</$list>
\end
This shows me also "$:/tags/Stylesheet"," $:/tags/SideBar", "
$:/tags/PageControls" etc...
How can this be excluded from the list?
Thanks
Stefan
[email protected] schrieb am Mittwoch, 7. Juli 2021 um 10:49:10 UTC+2:
> Thanks Eric for the non-obvious solution.
>
> For completeness I tried to use element-tag="$link" hoping that I would
> get the tag-pill graphic but the functionality of a link. However it looked
> like a link.
>
> Also thanks for the trick about partial overriding core macros. I have
> some customization to have a dropdown to choose tags for some other field
> that only authors have in my wiki and I copy-paste-modified the whole thing.
>
> On Wednesday, 7 July 2021 at 05:35:20 UTC+2 TW Tones wrote:
>
>> Thanks so much Eric,
>>
>> Just what I wanted to know. I assume as long as my tag pill inner is
>> lower on the list of items tagged $:./tags/Macro then it will override the
>> core?
>>
>> Such core macro overrides would be a useful thing, perhaps however we
>> need a mechanism to indicate when this is occurring?
>>
>> Here I use the variable tag-label and default to the tag name
>> <$text text={{{ [[$(tag-label)$]!is[blank]] ~[[$tag$]] }}}/>
>>
>> calling tags as follows
>> <$vars tag-label="argle bargle"><<tag>></$vars>
>>
>> Thanks again, this is a tip I expect to use elsewhere
>> Tones
>>
>> On Wednesday, 7 July 2021 at 11:35:24 UTC+10 Eric Shulman wrote:
>>
>>> On Tuesday, July 6, 2021 at 4:35:25 PM UTC-7 TW Tones wrote:
>>>
>>>> I wanted to have a label on a tag-pill, rather then the tag name yet
>>>> have the same tag drop down. Can you suggest a method? Ideally without
>>>> modifying the macro?
>>>>
>>>
>>> Changing the tag-pill output will, of necessity, require modifying the
>>> macro. However, you can *define a local variant of the
>>> tag-pill-inner() macro code*, rather than changing the core definition.
>>>
>>> My TiddlyTools TagCloud is an example of a modified tag macro:
>>>
>>> http://tiddlytools.com/filtergenerators.html#TiddlyTools%2FFilterGenerators%2FTagCloud
>>> In this code, I add a "tag count" to the tag-pill display. I did this
>>> by first *copying the tag-pill-inner() definition from
>>> $:/core/macros/tag*, and then adding display of the $(count)$ variable,
>>> the value of which was set by my code, before invoking the <<tag>> macro
>>> entrypoint. Here's my customized version of tag-pill-inner()
>>>
>>> \define
>>> tag-pill-inner(tag,icon,colour,fallbackTarget,colourA,colourB,element-tag,element-attributes,actions)
>>> <$vars foregroundColor=<<contrastcolour target:"""$colour$"""
>>> fallbackTarget:"""$fallbackTarget$""" colourA:"""$colourA$"""
>>> colourB:"""$colourB$""">> backgroundColor="""$colour$""">
>>> <$element-tag$ $element-attributes$ class="tc-tag-label
>>> tc-btn-invisible" style=<<tag-pill-styles>>>
>>> $actions$<$transclude tiddler="""$icon$"""/> <$view tiddler=<<__tag__>>
>>> field="title" format="text" /> *($(count)$)*
>>> </$element-tag$>
>>> </$vars>
>>> \end
>>>
>>> For your example -- using an alternative label instead of the tag name
>>> ---, you could do something similar, by *replacing* the part of
>>> tag-pill-inner() code that displays the icon and tag name, like this:
>>> \define
>>> tag-pill-inner(tag,icon,colour,fallbackTarget,colourA,colourB,element-tag,element-attributes,actions)
>>> <$vars foregroundColor=<<contrastcolour target:"""$colour$"""
>>> fallbackTarget:"""$fallbackTarget$""" colourA:"""$colourA$"""
>>> colourB:"""$colourB$""">> backgroundColor="""$colour$""">
>>> <$element-tag$ $element-attributes$ class="tc-tag-label
>>> tc-btn-invisible" style=<<tag-pill-styles>>>
>>> $actions$*<$text text="""$(label)$"""/>*
>>> </$element-tag$>
>>> </$vars>
>>> \end
>>>
>>> Then, let's suppose you want to *show the tag's caption text as the
>>> label*...you would invoke the <<tag>> macro like this:
>>> <$vars label={{!!caption}}><<tag>></$vars>
>>>
>>> or, if you want to use some specific literal text:
>>> <$vars label="argle bargle"><<tag>></$vars>
>>>
>>> Note that the <<tag>> macro relies upon the value of <<currentTiddler>>
>>> to determine which tag is being rendered.
>>>
>>> enjoy,
>>> -e
>>>
>>
--
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/0e73faa9-3dbf-42bc-b693-3fc492e5f588n%40googlegroups.com.