TW5-Bob
mkdocs-material
TW5-Bob | mkdocs-material | |
---|---|---|
10 | 93 | |
212 | 18,342 | |
1.9% | - | |
6.9 | 9.8 | |
1 day ago | 2 days ago | |
JavaScript | HTML | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
TW5-Bob
- Hey guys, what's the best self-hosted wiki service that's both stunning and easy on resources? Looking for something lightweight but still aesthetically pleasing. Any recommendations?
-
Having trouble syncing tiddlers across 2 computers using Dropbox and nodejs TiddlyWiki
I also don't know what's wrong and didn't test any of that myself, but to add to the comment by /u/Scalytor I would also suggest having a look at https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-Bob which has better integration with the file system and what is in the browser as it tries to solve it somewhat “ Two-way real-time syncing between the browser and file system”. This would improve the reliability between the two machines, and what has changed on the file system to be reflected in the browser.
-
Collaborating on a TiddlyWiki
Another more involved option is to use bob tiddlywiki: https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-Bob
-
A relatively painless way to maintain a multi user TiddlyWiki?
The main openly available solution for multi-user TiddlyWiki is Bob.
-
Widdler is a single binary that serves up TiddlyWikis
You love to see it!
I use my TW every day like a madman (https://philosopher.life/#⧖). I'd like to submit https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-Bob as a powerful (though perhaps not as simple) alternative. That's what most of my household uses (one is aiming to switch over soon).
-
Collective tiddlywiki
If you are a small group, you can use tiddlywiki together in realtime with the BOB addon but I'm not sure how well it will perform - https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-Bob
-
Creating multiple wikis dependent on a different login?
What you could do is create a wiki for someone, encrypt it and give them the password. Then you could merge their wiki into a bigger one. Maybe it's possible with tiddlywiki on node.js ? I'm almost certain you could do it with TW5-Bob
-
Somebody help me to install TiddlyWiki + TiddlyMap ?
The main things you can try that I can name without thinking much are: * TiddlyWiki on node.js (requires node.js which is just 1 exe file with well TiddlyWiki module) * TiddlyServer (which again requires node.js because now it is distributed as a module) * TW5-BOB (it has an EXE variant too)
- Advantages of using node js ?
-
TiddlyWiki 5.1.23 Is Out
It's hard to find a good solution since the main Tiddlywiki is built as a single-user rather than multi-user solution. But these two tools may help now or in the future since they are being developed. (I can't definitively answer since I'm not super familiar with either).
There's a Noteself setup of Tiddlywiki (https://noteself.org/) that syncs with a database and has revision history. You click on the upper right corner of a tiddler to access revision history. The revision UI's not very intuitive to start and I'm not sure how making a public site with revision history available would work though. It also is on version 5.1.21 rather than 5.1.23 of Tiddlywiki, though maybe the maker plans to upgrade in the future. You could ask here https://forum.noteself.org. I just started using it so I'm not super familiar with it.
TW5 Bob https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-Bob is being built to serve one or more Wikis for multiple people, but I don't know that they have revision history (I could be mistaken).
mkdocs-material
-
🚚 Building MVPs You Won’t Hate
Material Mk-Docs by Martin Donath works well if you prefer python.
-
The Open Source Sustainability Crisis
https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/
I'm an 'outsider', but from from the outside the Material For MkDocs Project looks like a very well managed open source project.
Martin Donath's project uses a 'sponsorware' release strategy to generate donations.
From my vantage point it seems to be working pretty well.
- Release Mkdocs-Material-9.5.0
- Agora a nossa Megathread possui um novo visual!
-
Ask HN: What's the best place to start a newsletter?
I just recently went through this decision process. My aim is to write code and math oriented posts so I need good support for nice syntax highlighting (at least colored) and mathjax (preferable) or katex. Substack is the most popular newsletter platform but fails at these two criteria. I love how math and syntax highlighting (plus numerous other features) work in MkDocs Material, which recently added a Blog plugin.
I wanted to combine the best of both: Substack as an amazing email social network, and MkDocs Material’s awesome look. So I’ve gone with using Substack as the core platform which I use to manage subscribers, and use it to post either math/code-free posts or a short teasers pointing to my main blog site on MkDocs Material when I need to show math/code
https://squidfunk.github.io/mkdocs-material/
- Material for MkDocs – Documentation that simply works
- Features tied to 'Piri Piri' funding goal
- MdBook – Create book from Markdown files. Like Gitbook but implemented in Rust
-
Changing CMS from Wordpress to ?
I've been migrating content to MKDocs (Material) over the last few months, so feel fairly qualified on this subject. It's somewhat limited in terms of navigation, but can probably handle 400-500 pages; you can see how navigation works in the link. Otherwise, it can handle most, if not all, the tasks you've listed.
- Kann man von Open Source leben? Interview mit Martin Donath, der von Open Source lebt.
What are some alternatives?
TiddlyServer - v2 - A static file server that can also save files and mount TiddlyWiki folders
Docusaurus - Easy to maintain open source documentation websites.
TiddlyWiki - A self-contained JavaScript wiki for the browser, Node.js, AWS Lambda etc.
sphinx - The Sphinx documentation generator
dave - A totally simple and very easy to configure stand alone webdav server
MkDocs - Project documentation with Markdown.
widdler - A WebDAV server for TiddlyWikis
mkdocstrings - :blue_book: Automatic documentation from sources, for MkDocs.
TiddlyWiki5-production
Read the Docs - The source code that powers readthedocs.org
tw-receiver - TiddlyWiki Plugin - save to PHP server
mike - Manage multiple versions of your MkDocs-powered documentation via Git