Oh thanks, I already discovered some of them, e. g. Thomas Elmiger's https://tid.li/tw5/hacks.html#TextStretch (For a comprehensive overview one should probably consider reveal, footnote, tooltip/mouseover/popup plugins as well, as they do conceptually similar things, with varying degree of distraction from the text. A little bit off-topic, but also very interesting if you read German: <https://vsis-www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/vsis/publications/lookthesis/313>)
I recently stumbled upon another version that's more sophisticated and probably closer to the original vision: https://getcoleman.com/ Am 11.06.20 um 18:32 schrieb TiddlyTweeter: > Florian > > Just FYI we have two versions of Stretch Text in TW! > > If interested let me know & I'll try hunt them down. > Might be interesting to see if sound cites can be embedded in them! > > TT > > On Thursday, 11 June 2020 17:23:50 UTC+2, Florian wrote: >> >> Thank you Tony! Yeah, it's a bit like an audio version of Ted Nelson's >> StretchText. >> >> I just added some docs on how to customize the colors and the progress >> animation. >> >> Am 11.06.20 um 15:06 schrieb TW Tones: >>> fkohrt, >>> >>> Just to be clear I really like this solution because it allows us to >>> treat audio like we do tiddler titles. >>> >>> * The audio can sit in tiddler content just as a link, tiddler link, >>> transclusion etc.. can. >>> * It is the most minimal interface you could get to an audio payer but >>> feels so true to tiddlywikis way of doing things. >>> >>> Thanks Heaps. >>> >>> Regards >>> Tony >>> >>> On Thursday, June 11, 2020 at 9:25:26 AM UTC+10, TW Tones wrote: >>> >>> >>> fkohrt >>> >>> Thanks for sharing this to the community. It does take audio closer >>> to the way tiddlywiki works and makes me wonder how we may make >>> tiddlers that represent audio similarly to images, even external >>> images. >>> The idea of audio to illustrate the text is also great adding a >>> further dimension. >>> >>> Quite timely for me as a friend is producing audio for sales to pod >>> casters >>> >>> Thank you >>> Tony >>> >>> >>> On Thursday, June 11, 2020 at 3:37:45 AM UTC+10, fkohrt wrote: >>> >>> I've assembled a small plugin that allows to embed inline audio >>> behind text. >>> >>> Demo: >>> >> https://fkohrt.gitlab.io/tw5-soundcite/#%24%3A%2Fplugins%2Ffk%2Fsoundcite >>> < >> https://fkohrt.gitlab.io/tw5-soundcite/#%24%3A%2Fplugins%2Ffk%2Fsoundcite> >> >>> >>> Code: https://gitlab.com/fkohrt/tw5-soundcite >>> <https://gitlab.com/fkohrt/tw5-soundcite> >>> >>> It uses the SoundCite library, the official website has a few >> more >>> advanced examples: http://soundcite.knightlab.com/ >>> <http://soundcite.knightlab.com/> >>> >>> The implementation is rather dirty, making use of RawMarkup tags >>> and >>> inline JavaScript and also doesn't work together with Camel Case >>> Wiki >>> Links enabled. Still, there might be some nice use cases, so if >> you >>> build something cool with it, I'd be happy to see it! >>> >>> Feel free to use, share and contribute, the "code" (it's really >>> not that >>> much) is MIT licensed. And helpful feedback is also appreciated, >>> as it's >>> my first contribution to the TiddlyWiki universe... >> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to tiddlywiki+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/6973b3ac-9a55-96d4-08e3-88b4c3a15ae0%40anche.no.