Hi Hegart and welcome! As you're not the first to note, this is a difficulty. The thing is, the only *really *"official" site is tiddlywiki.com, and this is run by Jeremy Ruston. People can contribute to this site (via Github <https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5>) in the same way they contribute to TW itself, but in the end it is what it is because of Jeremys incredible brute force work on it over the years. With the possible exception of a few other individuals, all other info-sites and resources are made from well meaning mortals who put up things hoping it might benefit others. Unfortunately this means it has a much more ephemeral nature to it... If it's not cared for then things decay.
In addition to questions/answers in this group, there is also a public >> TiddlySpace containing TiddlyWiki Community Documentation >> <http://www.tiddlywiki.org>. > > @Eric Frankly, this should probably be removed from the blurb. Where is the community documentation for TW5? There is no equivalent for TW5 and the main problem is that we currently don't have the infrastructure to let community members collectively build up a TW, at least not in any practical way. This will probably be solved when we enable TiddlyWikis to interact ("the Federation") and fetch/assemble data from other TWs but this is not yet implemented. The closest thing we come to a community-info site is, I'm sad to say, this place i.e this google group. Also, some of the commonly mentioned options for online hosting of TW > wikis, such as TiddlySpace and TiddlySpot, don't seem to advertise (or even > allow access to) information about which version of TW they are running. > This makes it even more confusing, particularly when trying to synchronize > the environment of my local (offline) TW implementation with an online TW > host. > TiddlySpace is run by BT (Brittish Telecom) and TiddlySpot is run by fellows Simon and Daniel Baird. I can't comment on BT, but for TiddlySpot it is again single individuals who are just incredibly generous. The thing with TiddlySpot is that you upload/overwrite whatever-the-default version is with whatever you want, i.e the latest version! BTW, note that TiddlySpace is based on non-TW5 architecture. If you're starting out with TW, I'd advice you to go with TW5, also for other reasons <http://twaddle.tiddlyspot.com/#Why%20I%20stopped%20using%20TiddlySpace>. Finally, while we're discussing TW versions, the Customizer > <http://twguides.org/customizer.html> at TWGuides by Andreas Hahn > <http://tiddlywiki.com/#TWGuides%20by%20Andreas%20Hahn>, which was linked > to from the Community tiddler <http://tiddlywiki.com/#Community> on the > main TW5 site, is out of date. It seems to be stuck on TW 5.1.0, but the > latest version is TW 5.1.9 apparently. This would be a valuable resource > for beginners like me, if only it were up-to-date. Yes... a really great concept there. Hope it is picked up on. Not sure about the policy on tw.com for referencing outdated stuff... should be discussed actually. I'm looking forward to learning more about TiddlyWiki, as I implement my > own offline knowledgebase with it. In spite of the issues you've encountered I can testify it is an incredible piece of software. There is much to learn so stick to it. <:-) -- 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 post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywiki. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/abb285df-329b-43c9-bbf5-e0a16c2da6bd%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

