Well.. I spoke a little soon...   Something still isn't processing right:

<$list filter={{!!myfield}} />

If the field looks like:

[[display text|tiddler link1]]
[[display text|tiddler link2]]

It's displaying the entire text including "|" and the link, and also 
linking to a tiddler with the entirety.

Any thoughts?


On Thursday, January 11, 2018 at 3:01:26 PM UTC-6, Don Eisele wrote:
>
> The error you pointed out was just me transcribing to the post.. no beans 
> there.
>
> However, from your suggestion, I figured out how to use list fields, and 
> they will do what I want :)
>
> Just a different way of thinking than I am used to for programming, had to 
> wrap my head around it.
>
> Thanks!
>
>
> On Thursday, January 11, 2018 at 2:07:16 PM UTC-6, Mark S. wrote:
>>
>> You might just consider using list fields, rather than splitting by some 
>> token. That way you maintain continuity with the core TW. But that's just 
>> my view point.
>>
>> If Tobias' filter works like other filters, then you have an error. It 
>> should be:
>>
>> <$list filter="[{!!myfield}split[;]]"/>
>>
>> Notice the final closing square bracket.
>>
>> Good luck!
>> -- Mark
>>
>> On Thursday, January 11, 2018 at 11:55:17 AM UTC-8, Don Eisele wrote:
>>>
>>> I'm trying to use fields to create a list, and am running into troubles  
>>> (I just started using TiddlyWiki last night).
>>>
>>>
>>> I found this plugin which looks like it will do exactly what I want:
>>>
>>> http://tobibeer.github.io/tw5-plugins/#split
>>>
>>>
>>> However, I still have trouble.
>>>
>>>
>>> I'm trying to create a bullet list from a field, split upon a character 
>>> (let's say ";").
>>>
>>> It seems like something like:
>>> <$list filter="[{!!myfield}split[;]"/>
>>>
>>>
>>> would do the trick, but I'm just not getting anything.
>>>
>>> I've tried a ton of combinations to no avail.
>>>
>>>
>>> If it's easier, a solution that involved multiple fields would be fine 
>>> too.
>>>    * {{!!myfield1}}
>>>    * {{!!myfield2}}
>>>    * {{!!myfield3}}
>>>
>>>
>>> but open ended so I could just use myfield*
>>>
>>> One other thing I noticed is in the examples the plugin lists a lot of:
>>>   {{{   .....    }}}}
>>>
>>>
>>> Sometimes I'm getting things from those examples, others not.   I didn't 
>>> find in the documentation on how to use that construct.   I'm thinking 
>>> maybe if it's an array I'm getting no output, but I'm not sure.
>>>
>>>

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