Woah, that'll take a minute to get through, but looks awesome! Thank you. On Tuesday, March 23, 2021 at 6:50:03 AM UTC-4 TW Tones wrote:
> Jack, > > I have attempted to document it all, see here > <https://anthonymuscio.github.io/#Standard%20Nomenclature>, for what I > wish I had when new to TW5 > > Also time handling has the [UTC] flag where needed. See > <<now "YYYY0MM0DD hh:mm">> > <<now "[UTC]YYYY0MM0DD hh:mm">> > > Tones > > On Monday, 15 March 2021 at 00:38:56 UTC+11 ja...@baty.net wrote: > >> Soren, this is fantastic, thank you! >> >> I must say that your recent video on YouTube has advanced my >> understanding of TiddlyWiki faster and farther than several years of >> muddling about on my own with docs and scattered resources. I'm very much >> looking forward to Grok TiddlyWiki. >> >> Jack >> >> On Sunday, March 14, 2021 at 8:38:09 AM UTC-4 Soren Bjornstad wrote: >> >>> On Saturday, March 13, 2021 at 1:17:46 PM UTC-6 ja...@baty.net wrote: >>> >>>> Ah, so *single* curly braces, thanks! >>>> >>>> I'm not sure I'll ever completely understand when to use which >>>> variation. :) >>>> >>> >>> It's probably simpler than you think, there's just currently nowhere >>> that summarizes it in an understandable form: >>> >>> - [[square brackets]] for links / to refer to the name of a tiddler >>> - <<angle brackets>> to get the value of variables or macros >>> - {{curly braces}} to get the value of fields or tiddlers >>> >>> Inside a filter expression, you use just *one* of each. Anywhere else, >>> you use two. >>> >>> Macros add slight additional wrinkles to the <<angle bracket syntax>>: >>> >>> - Inside macros, <<__angle brackets with underscores__>> and $dollar >>> signs$ both refer to a macro parameter, but the dollar signs use text >>> substitution (understanding when to use text substitution and when not >>> to >>> is the only hard part). >>> - Inside macros, <<angle brackets>> and $(parenthesized dollar >>> signs)$ both refer to a variable, but the dollar signs use text >>> substitution. >>> >>> And last, {{{ triple curly braces }}} select one or more tiddlers using >>> a filter, then transclude them – so you can think of it as the “super” or >>> “extra powerful” version of normal double-brace transclusion, since it has >>> one extra brace. >>> >> -- 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/2b7e6df9-0b20-455c-a1a8-92ba10000884n%40googlegroups.com.