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Soren,In your "better indexes" essay you write:If we do have the full text included in each locus, we may want to write a summary anyway and store it along with the full text: this way, we’ll be able to create an outline later and more easily see what parts of the document we’re hopping between.And it reminds me how certain enlightenment texts were printed with a running outer-margin summary distilling key points (and of course the cognitive work of spelling out those side-notes is considerable!). For example, see the side-notes starting at p 49 (pdf-pagination) on this Adam Smith manuscript: https://oll-resources.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/oll3/store/titles/237/0206-01_Bk.pdfFor some tiddlywiki projects, I've started to employ a super-condensed summary field (call it, say, the tldr field) that can be displayed for certain purposes. Unlike the main body of the tiddler, the tldr is text-only, maximum of a single sentence. (And if I can't summarize the tiddler in one sentence, then it needs to be more than one tiddler. ;) ) Of course, the fact that tw's standard search interface doesn't peek beyond title and text field means this solution requires some building-around to be useful.
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Some of you all might be interested in this new post on my blog:https://controlaltbackspace.org/notes/better-indexes-through-semantic-modeling/
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<<list-links "[all[current]backlinks[]tag[Entry]]">>
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Soren,In your "better indexes" essay you write:If we do have the full text included in each locus, we may want to write a summary anyway and store it along with the full text: this way, we’ll be able to create an outline later and more easily see what parts of the document we’re hopping between.And it reminds me how certain enlightenment texts were printed with a running outer-margin summary distilling key points (and of course the cognitive work of spelling out those side-notes is considerable!). For example, see the side-notes starting at p 49 (pdf-pagination) on this Adam Smith manuscript: https://oll-resources.s3.us-east-2.amazonaws.com/oll3/store/titles/237/0206-01_Bk.pdfFor some tiddlywiki projects, I've started to employ a super-condensed summary field (call it, say, the tldr field) that can be displayed for certain purposes. Unlike the main body of the tiddler, the tldr is text-only, maximum of a single sentence. (And if I can't summarize the tiddler in one sentence, then it needs to be more than one tiddler. ;) ) Of course, the fact that tw's standard search interface doesn't peek beyond title and text field means this solution requires some building-around to be useful.
Overall, I'm enjoying your essay and its questions!-SpringerOn Monday, August 9, 2021 at 9:17:00 PM UTC-4 Soren Bjornstad wrote:Some of you all might be interested in this new post on my blog:https://controlaltbackspace.org/notes/better-indexes-through-semantic-modeling/It's a proposal for a system for indexing large documents based on a hypertext graph, including a discussion of a possible TiddlyWiki prototype. Warning: 6,000+ words.
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SorenPlease check the filters in given examples, there are some other cases of imbalanced square brackets!
- Why is there not anything about tags? Entries replicate tags in Tiddlywiki (but not necessarily)
- Some concepts with given scripts are confusing like Nearby lists
ExampleWe can similarly replicate Tabularium’s Nearby list on loci. On the locus view template, we simply list all of the index entries that link to the current locus:<<list-links "[all[current]backlinks[]tag[Entry]]">>
So this means we have a view template for locus, means command is only works with tiddler tagged LocusThen [all[current]backlinks[]tag[Entry]] will list all entries (e.g tag with Entry refer (has link) to current Locus!This means, an Entry shall have a link to a Locus?! Means in a tag tiddler we refer to a Locus tiddler! This is confusing!
By the way, I enjoyed your writeup and I think it needs some working example to be better understood!
What do you think if we use a small section in a tiddler to store tiddler summary or description in the text field (tiddler body)?
3. no need to duplicate text
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