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Moving from the Zettelkasten-approach by Niklas Luhmann (which is where the name of my app originates) towards more sophisticated, more “contemporary” methods, I quickly discovered the markup language “Markdown,” invented by John Gruber in 2004...
MohammadI installed it and dependencies for Pandoc & LaTex and the BetterBibTex plugin. Works well!Its, basically, a featured academic word processor written in JavaScript on node, assembled into a self contained executable through Electron.
Though, in many ways, it can be contextualized / compared best with other dedicated software like that ... e.g. Nota Bene https://www.notabene.com/Looking at the features of ZettIr I'm pretty with a clear design and laid out you could get very close to it in TW. Perhaps not the full flexibility on citation styles, but very close.I think the issue is that in TW we don't tend to collectively dedicate to "finished apps" by field spec, rather we tend to work ad-hoc in many directions so clear apps are not that numerous.
One exception is "to do" tools. Both ToDoNow & Cardo come close.And a recent outstanding exception is the epub reader which is extremely good at showing what a few skilled people working together can achieve in a polished dedicated application ...
-- For Publication Layout needs for journal styles. CSS could likely do it in TW. Not too difficult.-- For Citations the format needs vary by journal. Zettlr default is "APA format" (APA = American Psychological Association) which is widely used in humanities & social science.Strict science tends to need more diverse citation schemes. The variations of styling citations seems the most complex issue.
I am not clear how you could, in TW, fully support the full diversity of citation schemes.
-- Output/Export to PDF, Word etc ... Point is academics need to publish research & articles.
So you need flexible export, or good PDF "virtual printing".
I think that is achievable in TW.
It just needs better attention to CSS print styling (though pagination remains a more complex problem).
... until now I have treated TiddlyWiki as a platform. ... My interest is a rapid development environment ...
... Ultimately Tiddlywiki as a platform will most likely be the best for solutions ... not well served by existing applications ...
I wonder if we should get collaborative projects going ... so we can build a "best of breed" editions.
As a community we are not producing many of these whole editions that novices can use out of the box.
1 - can specify them
2 - are not one man and a dog
3 - is achievable via TW
The first thing I would want, is a plain-old TW writing application that would allow me to write without having to constantly break things out to separate tiddlers, or doing so with minimal interruption.
Mohammad
-- Output/Export to PDF, Word etc ... Point is academics need to publish research & articles.They need flexible export because different journals have different requirements.So you need flexible export, or good PDF "virtual printing".I think that is achievable in TW.It just needs better attention to CSS print styling (though pagination remains a more complex problem).