IMO, false positives are not as bad as false negatives.  False positives
can always be escaped with ~.  There are plenty of false positives with
CamelCase syntax.  At work, I frequently use internal product names in
tiddlers, such as "SM3G".  They are recognized as tiddler names, but that's
fine.  It has never bothered me as much as the inability to create my own
protocol.  This is just my subjective user experience.


On Mon, Oct 28, 2013 at 5:04 AM, Stephan Hradek <stephan.hra...@gmail.com>wrote:

>
>
>> I didn't check if regexp b) is possible with Javascript.
>>
>
> It's a fairly easy regexp and yes: It is possible with JavaScript.
>
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