In addition to questions/answers in this group, there is also a public TiddlySpace containing TiddlyWiki Community Documentation.
In addition to questions/answers in this group, there is also a public TiddlySpace containing TiddlyWiki Community Documentation.
Where is the community documentation for TW5?
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.
Finally, while we're discussing TW versions, the Customizer at TWGuides by Andreas Hahn, which was linked to from the Community tiddler on the main TW5 site, is out of date.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.
I'm looking forward to learning more about TiddlyWiki, as I implement my own offline knowledgebase with it.
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.
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.
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) in the same way they contribute to TW itself...I do have a GitHub account, but I'm not very familiar with it, as I'm not a software developer, as such. I'm just an end user, and a (former) network administrator. I have some simplistic programming skills, but much of what I learned as a child was based on the 16-bit microEclipse processor or the 8-bit 6502 processor, neither of which are still useful these days. I can copy/paste code snippets in most modern programming languages, but machine code is my mother-tongue.
WHY not just run another wiki where collaboration is permitted live? DokuWiki is perfectly capable to do this. Can't we use a DokuWIki instance till TiddlyWiki 5 is ready for collaboration?
Or is there a NIH (not invented here) problem with using a 'competing' software?
I appreciate the efforts of volunteers working on making TiddlyWiki as great as it is, and particularly the work of Jeremy. I plan to watch the hangout videos at some time soon and catch up with all that has been happening in this space.
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.
This sounds very positive. Is it going to be something like scary transclusion in MediaWiki? Sorry, I'll probably be referring to and comparing TW to MW quite a lot as I learn to use TW. Please understand that it's only as a frame of reference, not as a comparison of the merits of either product.
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.
Thanks for explaining the difference between these sites. As you'll no doubt see in another discussion in this Google Group, I've settled on using Google Drive to host my online ("dev") instance of TiddlyWiki now. All this googlish stuff is making my head spin, as I normally try to avoid Google for privacy reasons, even before the Snowden revelations. That's why I have created a whole new Google account just for my TW interactions.
On Sunday, September 13, 2015 at 3:46:58 AM UTC+2, Hegart Dmishiv wrote:I plan to watch the hangout videos at some time soon and catch up with all that has been happening in this space.Make sure you find the notes/timelinks that @pmario has kindly created to most of them.
But as you note, we're again limited in that it is tricky to collaboratively refine the material, and expecting individuals to make such efforts so that the result is good enough to be generally useful... well, that is too much to ask from anyone even if what Mario has done is probably as close as it gets.
> MediaWiki? Sorry, I'll probably be referring to and comparing TW to MW
> quite a lot as I learn to use TW. Please understand that it's only as a
> frame of reference, not as a comparison of the merits of either product.
For MW, you did mean MediaWiki instead the WikiMedia, the foundation behinds wikipedia. MW is server based while TWc and TW5 are not. There is a mediawiki/MW translator which is based on TW classic.