If you put the tagglyTagging macro inside the empty tagName tiddler it works quite nice.
[[tagName]] <<tagglyTagging>> [[overviewTiddler]] <<tabs txtOverview TabName "some label text" tagName>> The only problem is, if you open tagName tiddler you'll see the tagglyTagging list twice. have fun! -mario On Mar 11, 3:12 pm, Tiago Gomes <[email protected]> wrote: > Ok. Going to see what i can do. > > thank you very much, > > Tiago > > On Mar 10, 11:02 pm, Eric Shulman <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > I´m using tagglytagging for having a kind of sitemap with hierarchy in > > > tags. I want to be able to display my defaulttiddlers as tabs, having > > > some tiddlers of the sitemap displayed, the problem is that the main > > > tiddlers (hierarchy up) don´t have text, only tags and in tab form the > > > tags doesn´t show up. Is it possible to display tags inside a tiddler > > > in tab form? > > > The tags on a given tiddler can be displayed using: > > <<tags TiddlerName>> > > > The tiddlers tagged with a given value can be displayed using: > > <<tagging tagvalue>> > > > The tricky part... is that you want to use these macros within tabs. > > But the <<tabs>> macro only lets you show whole *tiddlers* in the > > tabs. So, how can you get just the macro output? One solution is to > > use separate tiddlers or *hidden sections* to wrap the macro calls, > > and then references those sections within the <<tabs>> macro, like > > this: > > > /% > > !section1 > > <<tags Tiddler1>> > > !section2 > > <<tags Tiddler2>> > > !section3 > > ... > > !end > > %/<<tags chkMySiteMap > > section1label section1tip ThisTiddler##section1 > > section2label section2tip ThisTiddler##section2 > > section3label section3tip ThisTiddler##section3>> > > > Of course, this is not very convenient or flexible, as it requires > > "hard coding" the tabset and the hidden sections. A better solution > > (though outside the scope of this response) would be to write a custom > > script that generates the tabset and hidden sections into tiddler and > > then you just view that tiddler. > > > You can see some examples of "tabset-generating code" here: > > http://www.TiddlyTools.com/#ShowTabsForTags > > and > > http://www.TiddlyTools.com/#AdvancedOptionsPlugin > > > Note: unfortunately, while both code examples generate tabsets, > > neither one uses hidden sections to render macro content, so some > > additional code work is needed to adapt it to your purposes... > > nonetheless, this should hopefully point you in the right direction. > > > enjoy, > > -e > > Eric Shulman > > TiddlyTools / ELS Design Studios > > ---------- > > Was this answer useful? If so, please help support TiddlyTools: > > > TiddlyTools direct contributions: (paypal) > > http://www.TiddlyTools.com/#Donate > > UnaMesa tax-deductible contributions: > > http://about.unamesa.org/Participate(paypal) > > TiddlyWiki consulting: > > http://www.TiddlyTools.com/#ELSDesignStudios > > http://www.TiddlyTools.com/#Contact -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywiki?hl=en.

