Now a link to a single tiddler like http://tiddlywiki.com/#HelloThere
will just open that single tiddler (the old behaviour was to also open
the default tiddlers)
Previously, widgets were reading variables from themselves or their
cascaded ancestors. That means that if a widget sets a variable and
then reads the same variable, it will get the same variable back. That
sounds reasonable, until you consider a widget that wants to modify a
variable - eg the tiddler macro. For example:
```
<$tiddler tiddler={{!!report}}>
<$transclude mode="block" />
</$tiddler>
```
Here we first evaluate the `{{!!report}}` reference, which involves
reading the currentTiddler variable, looking up the tiddler, and
retrieving it’s `report` field. The next the tiddler widget is
refreshed, it will use the newly set currentTiddler as the basis for
resolving the `{{!!reference}}` reference.
The fix is to get variables from ancestors, but continue to set them on
ourselves.
We were parsing the boot tiddlers, making them into a widget and then
refreshing the widget tree. The problem is that subsequent chances to
the boot tiddlers themselves wouldn’t be picked up as part of the
refresh.
Now we indirectly parse those UI boot tiddlers through a transclusion,
which does get refreshed in the desired way.
Now we respond dynamically to changes in the location hash in the URL
bar. It means that you can do links in HTML as `<a
href=“#HelloThere”>go</a>` and in Markdown as `[example
link](#HelloThere).`
We still need to make startup.js more modular
At this point we respect any permalink at startup, but we don’t yet
dynamically update the permalink, nor do we respond to ongoing
permalink changes.
The permalink separator being `%00` seems like it might be a bit
controversial. It buys us not having to wrap tiddler titles in double
square brackets if they contain spaces.
Another thing is that this scheme doesn’t support tiddler filters; the
plan is to support them like this:
http://tiddlywiki.com/#!Target%00%00[tag[task]sort[created]]
1. Moved some methods out of boot.js because they are not needed until
after bootup
2. Added alternate message for editing an overridden shadow tiddler
3. Minor style tweaks
Replace this with a $tw.wiki.isModifiedTiddler(title) as part of the
wiki object. This allows it to be used outside of the current Wiki which
can change.
Should only display the confirmation if the shadow tiddler has not been
overridden in the first place. It checks this by looking for the
existence of a modified field for which the default system based shadow
do not have until a user changes them.
This addresses the second line item on issue #570
We will need new translations for the added string
`ConfirmEditShadowTiddler`
When saving a tiddler we check to see if the tiddler has changed
(isModified) if it hasn't then bounce the event to tw-cancel-tiddler
instead.
Addresses first line item in issue #570
This change is likely to break most existing scripts that call
TiddlyWiki.
TL;DR - output paths are now relative to the editions/output folder,
rather than to the current folder
See [[Notes for upgrading to 5.0.11-beta]] for details.
By rearranging the `[all[]]` operator we are able to ensure that shadow
tiddlers get processed before ordinary tiddlers. This makes it easier
to create custom stylesheets that override the core.
Simple optimisation whereby we defer the main refresh cycle when only
draft tiddlers have been modified.
We defer for 400ms, and keep extending the delay at each fresh draft
modification. The effect is that if the user is using the preview then
they’ll need to pause typing for 400ms before the preview is updated.
Fixes#470, #454, and maybe #206.
Refactoring page rendering so that we can fix the performance issues
with editing drafts. The plan is to defer the refresh cycle if all the
changes are to draft tiddlers.
We need to do a bit more of this to get startup.js into better shape
(and more extensible).
We need to send messages to the parent so that we don’t set up an
infinite loop by sending `tw-navigate` messages. Also we need to pass
along the target of the navigation.
load.js references the encoding set in boot.js when loading a file.
boot.js can now register file type with different deserialization from
their actual type
This is an experimental module to help us measure the performance of
the refresh cycle and the filter mechanism. Not intended to replace the
performance measurement features in browser developer tools, just to
make it easier to automate performance checks cross-browser.
The immediate purpose is to help in refactoring the filter mechanism.
The recent change to encapsulate the wiki store “tiddlers” object has
hurt the performance of filters, and it’s going to be helpful to have
decent measurements while refactoring that code.
I’m still not convinced that this stuff should be in the core, and may
well end up removing it after the present refactoring cycle.