Tony, 
I am putting together some info that may clarify some of your questions and 
will post that next, but I want to speak to a couple of your bullet points:


   - A Table of tables filter `[contains:text[<<table>>]]` I did not expect 
   that to work give the special meaning of < and >

I have not played much with the contains operator, but I am also pleasantly 
surprised to see that you can put virtually anything in as its parameter 
and it will search for it. not only will it do < and > but you can search 
on just about any symbol except square brackets. This of course has nothing 
to do with my plugin, but with the contains operator. The filter you 
mention here is searching all tiddlers "text" fields for <<table>> which is 
a fairly safe way to determine if the tiddler is a table or not.

   - I am not sure if I can change the template for the title column for a 
   specific table?
   
You absolutely can and this is what makes TiddlyTables so powerful. 
Basically, the elements of the table are all modular and are controlled by 
templates. I will go into detail about editing templates in my next post, 
but the template that controls the body of the title column 
is: $:/plugins/aaldrich/tables/template/body/title.


       I note you can place any table in the sidebar with $:/tags/SideBar 
but you need to set the tiddler
       eg
       <$tiddler tiddler="Has Changed">
       <<table>>
       </$tiddler>

Let me explain what is happening here. A TiddlyTable gets its parameters 
from the fields that are created when the table is created. Essentially, a 
table requires its own tiddler to store these fields. We can call them 
"table tiddlers". Notice when you click the table button a new tiddler is 
created and it contains the default table. If you edit this tiddler you 
will see its text is just <<table>> and it has 29 fields that serve as its 
parameters. When you set TiddlerA's text to use the tiddler widget like you 
show here, what you are really asking is for TiddlyTables to store these 29 
parameters to a Tiddler called "Has Changed" but render in TiddlerA. The 
same effect can be achieved using transclusion, and in the case of using 
"$:/tags/SideBar" 
the table MUST be transcluded or it will not find the parameters its 
looking for. This is a limitation of the "non-standard" implementation of 
macros I am using, and I mention it in Known Issues/Limitations. My next 
post will have a link in it that describes this further.

These are great questions, keep them coming!



On Tuesday, September 17, 2019 at 1:44:19 AM UTC-5, TonyM wrote:
>
> For fun whilst learning more on TiddlyTables
>
>
>    - SImply put it is a new way of looking at any filter
>    - A Table of tables filter `[contains:text[<<table>>]]` I did not 
>    expect that to work give the special meaning of < and >
>    - Are tables totally self contained? Looks like it, The advantage is 
>    TiddlyTables plus a bunch of tables to access various system information 
>    would be very helpful
>    - I am not sure if I can change the template for the title column for 
>    a specific table?
>
> I note you can place any table in the sidebar with $:/tags/SideBar but 
> you need to set the tiddler
> eg
> <$tiddler tiddler="Has Changed">
> <<table>>
> </$tiddler>
>
> I will keep exploring this.
>
> I would like to see a one button create table from filter.
>
> Tony
>
> On Tuesday, September 17, 2019 at 3:53:36 PM UTC+10, TonyM wrote:
>>
>> Alan,
>>
>> Thanks, I am just exploring the possibilities of tiddlytables. Since the 
>> minimum one needs is a filter it is a great way to simply list tiddlers of 
>> any type. But then a custom table with custom fields can expose other 
>> details.
>>
>>
>> I also appreciate the drop down on the *Query Records* (tbl-filter) - 
>> filter syntax
>> Quite a few people have being asking for help for writing filters and you 
>> have already done it.
>>
>> It would be great in an editor toolbar button as well.
>>
>> A simple example is
>> [all[shadows]prefix[$:/info]!prefix[$:/info/browser]] [[$:/info/browser/
>> name]]
>>
>> and show the text field.
>>
>> Regards
>> Tony
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, September 17, 2019 at 2:58:04 PM UTC+10, Alan Aldrich wrote:
>>>
>>> I have uploaded a new version of TiddlyTables that includes a 
>>> confirmation when deleting. Thank you for your excellent comments and 
>>> feedback. 
>>>
>>> http://tiddlytables.tiddlyspot.com/
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> Alan
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, September 10, 2019 at 6:17:44 PM UTC-5, Diego Mesa wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hey Alan,
>>>>
>>>> I see that your plugin uses the ActionDeleteTiddlerWidget:
>>>>
>>>> https://tiddlywiki.com/#ActionDeleteTiddlerWidget
>>>>
>>>> According to the docs:
>>>>
>>>> There are several differences compared to the WidgetMessage: 
>>>>> tm-delete-tiddler 
>>>>> <https://tiddlywiki.com/#WidgetMessage%3A%20tm-delete-tiddler>:
>>>>>    
>>>>>    - *The user is not prompted to confirm the deletion*
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>    - No automatic updating of the story list
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>    - No special handling of draft tiddlers
>>>>>
>>>>> I think switching deletion to the tm-delete-tiddler message would 
>>>> handle the confirmation.
>>>>
>>>> Best,
>>>> Diego
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, September 10, 2019 at 11:02:47 AM UTC-5, Alan Aldrich wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> I agree the delete column should have a confirmation. I will try to 
>>>>> get that in the next version. Do you know of a simple and standard way to 
>>>>> accomplish this?
>>>>
>>>>

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