Hi,

CamelCase words get automatically made into links, otherwise you have to 
create links manually, the most straightforward way being to enclose them 
in double square brackets, [[Like This]].

What you can do with TW is things like automatically generating "smart 
lists" of tiddlers carrying particular sets of tags, or which otherwise 
match the conditions of a "filter" expression.

Regards,
Richard

On Thursday, August 7, 2014 7:50:14 PM UTC+10, rogmint wrote:
>
> I have an amateur interest in Modernist architecture and am using 
> TiddlyWiki to collect notes on the subject. It is clearly an efficient and 
> frugal tool for this.
>
> What it is not doing -- which I expected it to -- is automatically tagging 
> occurrences of significant terms once I have identified those terms. If I 
> use a product such as Tomboy, for instance, and tag a name, e.g. Gropius, 
> that term becomes live throughout the original document and all future 
> documents.
>
> I see that TW uses CamelCase to make a term live. Does that mean I would 
> have to change every occurrence of Gropius to, say, "GroPius" in order to 
> use the hypertextual properties of TW?
>
> Perhaps I'm misunderstanding the way TW works. Please advise.
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Roger Whitehead
>

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