By placeholders, you mean links, right?

The problem is, what do you do when you want to assemble a final doc? Also, 
when I write, I don't necessarily want to "jump" from one context to the 
next. I want to sweep my eyes back and forth to make sure I've maintained 
tone, voice, wording. 

The "smallest semantic" unit also poses questions. What is the smallest 
unit? A paragraph? A chapter?

Thanks!
-- Mark

On Thursday, August 30, 2018 at 3:31:45 AM UTC-7, @TiddlyTweeter wrote:
>
> Here we tend to focus on technical solutions to technical problems.
>
> That is good.
>
> But I think we often underplay the obvious for potential users. We 
> under-promote what we have already normally.
>
> For a moment *consider TW as a Writing Medium*, by which I mean normal 
> authors of fiction or fact.
>
> One outstanding thing is that you can so easily create "placeholders". A 
> ref to a Tiddler that does NOT yet exist. That is exactly like many 
> people's writing process. You know you need to "fill in gaps" later to make 
> better writings. TW facilitates that very well indeed.
>
> For instance a writer needs to know they can write a text referencing 
> stuff they need to expand on but haven't written the expansions yet. TW 
> EASILY provides the "placeholders" for these.
>
> This simple mechanism is not advertised enough IMO.
>
> Best wishes
> Josiah
>
>
>
>

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