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:
>
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