Forgot to mention.  This will be a case of eating my own dog-food.

i.e. as I build this tool, the tool itself will be used to generate the CSS 
for the tool.

As per the screenshot below, I'm going to want my buttons to appear a 
certain way.  To get there, I have to setup the functionality in the tool 
to generate the CSS I need.  That's a nice little motivator...

[image: Screenshot 2022-10-18 2.48.03 PM.png]

On Tuesday, October 18, 2022 at 2:52:27 PM UTC-3 Charlie Veniot wrote:

> Thanks! 
>
> BTW: Not too focused just yet on "pretty."  (Well, a little bit of 
> lipstick applied when and where it is quick and easy, or when I find 
> something just too painfully distracting to suffer.)
>
> Right now, just focusing on adding functionality as a way of identifying 
> the functionality.  (Bit analysis outside of the trenches done in some 
> document: not my cup o' tea.  I prefer get my hands dirty with immediate 
> prototyping.)
>
> I'll throw a version of this TiddlyWiki out later today so folk can play.
>
> On Tuesday, October 18, 2022 at 2:29:16 PM UTC-3 History Buff wrote:
>
>> Nice work! I like the looks of the tool so far a lot! This is coming from 
>> a perspective of completely re-wickering my TW's look and feel so this 
>> would be quite handy at the moment.
>>
>> On Tuesday, October 18, 2022 at 9:56:55 AM UTC-7 [email protected] wrote:
>>
>>> Hey, thanks for the feedback!
>>>
>>> Narration does not to me easily happen, especially when I've got all of 
>>> these "dots" and haven't quite figured out how they are (or should be) 
>>> connected. 
>>>
>>> Big surprise to me: actually doing a dry and silent early run-through 
>>> video actually got the wheels of this old sponge spinning pretty quickly: 
>>> dots became clearer, connections materialised.  Huh.  Who woulda thunk it?
>>>
>>> I quickly "feel" (yeah, I suffer from sensory overload) the weight of 
>>> TiddlyWiki size-creep, as every committed/unchanged byte gets saved and 
>>> resaved, loaded and reloaded, over and over and over again  Hence my 
>>> natural inclination to build this thing as a stand-alone tool for building 
>>> things meant to be then deployed wherever needed (kind of like modular 
>>> homes, built in a warehouse somewhere, and then deployed to the final 
>>> location when done.)
>>>
>>> But I will set up an easy option for anybody to drag and drop "all of 
>>> the functionality" into any TiddlyWiki instance.
>>>
>>> Cheers !
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, October 18, 2022 at 10:16:14 AM UTC-3 [email protected] 
>>> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Okay, it makes much more sense, now, with the narration ;-)
>>>>
>>>> I like the idea of the interface to enter and change the CSS values and 
>>>> be able to see them in real-time -- much easier!
>>>> And the ability to drag/drop your CSS Class Tiddler into other 
>>>> TiddlyWiki's is a definite plus *(although I don't envision myself 
>>>> using it in that capacity very much, as I only deal with a small number of 
>>>> discrete wiki's, and would probably just add the main 'app' to each one)*
>>>> .
>>>>
>>>> Hope you keep interest in this project -- Will be watching it :)
>>>>
>>>> --Zaphod
>>>> On Monday, October 17, 2022 at 3:09:04 PM UTC-4 [email protected] 
>>>> wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Now that I've thought a bit about architecture, usage, process ...
>>>>>
>>>>> I hope this "non-silent" video is more informative: 
>>>>> https://youtu.be/CZeeSa0EugA
>>>>>
>>>>> If you are interested in this kind of thing, let me know.
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>

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