On Saturday, 24 October 2020 13:46:22 UTC+11, PMario wrote: > > On Saturday, October 24, 2020 at 12:46:49 AM UTC+2, TonyM wrote: >> >> Mario, >> Inline syntax defaults to a SPAN. The inline wikitext syntax doesn't >> care about linebreaks. >> > > So it can /° start in the middle of the line, > and *end* at the start of the line > °/ it will create a span and show all the text in 1 line by default. > > Agreed, In fact sometimes that what we want to do. Take an inline slab and treat it differently even if it contains line breaks eg a Quote however more often and not we choose either
1. Mark-up with a line scope 2. Mark-up with a paragraph scope 3. Mark-up with a block scope 4. And /°mark-up/° inline. This is where I think we should choose 4 glyphs set up for these default "treatments" although their whole meaning can be redefined this will be their default behaviours. So If I scan you customised wiki text I can guess the usage of custom mark-up you have not looked at the definition of. I don't know yet, but one glyph should be unencumbered with any defaults. And perhaps others may be used for html/buttons/macros by default. This is all about a de facto standard that can easily be broken in fact is some cases that may be exactly what you want to do. Wile writing consider it a code block, when finished use half line spaced paragraphs with justify. Just by redefining the pragma once. Reuse the same glyph, away from its de facto standard. I must say it is hard for me to remember which glyph, has which default behaviour in the current setup. Regards Tony -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWikiDev" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to tiddlywikidev+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywikidev/31adaf7d-361e-4d9b-b0f6-85b58b8e48a1o%40googlegroups.com.