Hi all,
I've just been playing with TW5 on Google Drive [TW5][TWC] Host your
TiddlyWiki on Google Drive
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!searchin/tiddlywiki/google$20drive$20/tiddlywiki/pEEi9evWUJQ/zaWHphdDUQAJ
- hosting works fine but as the OP points out saving changes is a real
pain. I
Why not plain ol' HTML?
- the branches (edges) of your tree become hyperlinks
- you can scale the number of files/pages as you like, trading off the
efficiency of your file system vs. rendering time in browser
- you're already writing a text file, html requires minimal overhead and
work
-
as
poking your eye with a stick ;-)
Pete
On Wednesday, 5 March 2014 09:13:09 UTC, Peter Vogt wrote:
Why not plain ol' HTML?
- the branches (edges) of your tree become hyperlinks
- you can scale the number of files/pages as you like, trading off the
efficiency of your file system vs. rendering
Sorry, just checked but the tool I was thinking of is not doxygen... May
be worth asking on stack overflow if you want to pursue that avenue.
On Wednesday, 5 March 2014 09:19:20 UTC, Peter Vogt wrote:
PS: If you can specify a grammar for your data you can then use tools like
doxygen
down the line, after it finally has the features I need.
On Thursday, January 16, 2014 2:34:23 AM UTC-7, Peter Vogt wrote:
Hi tiddlerers,
I'm a TW noob in a bind deciding whether to go for TWC with its mature
ecosystem and online hosting methods or TW5 as it new, exciting, changing
Hi tiddlerers,
I'm a TW noob in a bind deciding whether to go for TWC with its mature
ecosystem and online hosting methods or TW5 as it new, exciting, changing
(and more future proof?), running on node js. My requirement is for a
personal wiki which is hosted on a vps, which will be
I looked through the code as to why and then realised that node does not
have root priviledge and therefore wont listen on port 1023 without
tinkering. See
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/6109089/how-do-i-run-node-js-on-port-80 for
discussion and options.
Just posting this as I looked
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