Welcome to TiddlyWiki, a non-linear personal web notebook that anyone can use and keep forever, independently of any corporation.
TiddlyWiki is a complete interactive wiki in JavaScript. It can be used as a single HTML file in the browser or as a powerful Node.js application. It is highly customisable: the entire user interface is itself implemented in hackable WikiText.
Learn more and see it in action at https://tiddlywiki.com/
Developer documentation is in progress at https://tiddlywiki.com/dev/
The new official forum for talking about TiddlyWiki: requests for help, announcements of new releases and plugins, debating new features, or just sharing experiences. You can participate via the associated website, or subscribe via email.
Note that talk.tiddlywiki.org is a community run service that we host and maintain ourselves. The modest running costs are covered by community contributions.
For the convenience of existing users, we also continue to operate the original TiddlyWiki group (hosted on Google Groups since 2005):
https://groups.google.com/group/TiddlyWiki
There are several resources for developers to learn more about TiddlyWiki and to discuss and contribute to its development.
There is also a discussion group specifically for discussing TiddlyWiki documentation improvement initiatives: https://groups.google.com/group/tiddlywikidocs
Debian/Ubuntu:apt install nodejs
May need to be followed up by:apt install npm
Arch Linuxyay -S tiddlywiki
(installs node and tiddlywiki)
brew install node
npm install -g tiddlywiki
If it fails with an error you may need to re-run the command as an administrator:sudo npm install -g tiddlywiki
(Mac/Linux)
tiddlywiki --version
tiddlywiki mynewwiki --init server
to create a folder for a new wiki that includes server-related componentstiddlywiki mynewwiki --listen
to start TiddlyWikitiddlywiki mynewwiki --build index
The -g
flag causes TiddlyWiki to be installed globally. Without it, TiddlyWiki will only be available in the directory where you installed it.
TiddlyWiki5 includes a set of commands for use on the command line to perform an extensive set of operations based on TiddlyWikiFolders, TiddlerFiles.
For example, the following command loads the tiddlers from a TiddlyWiki HTML file and then saves one of them in static HTML:
tiddlywiki --verbose --load mywiki.html --rendertiddler ReadMe ./readme.html
Running tiddlywiki
from the command line boots the TiddlyWiki kernel, loads the core plugins and establishes an empty wiki store. It then sequentially processes the command line arguments from left to right. The arguments are separated with spaces.
Introduced in v5.1.20 First, there can be zero or more plugin references identified by the prefix +
for plugin names or ++
for a path to a plugin folder. These plugins are loaded in addition to any specified in the TiddlyWikiFolder.
The next argument is the optional path to the TiddlyWikiFolder to be loaded. If not present, then the current directory is used.
The commands and their individual arguments follow, each command being identified by the prefix --
.
tiddlywiki [+<pluginname> | ++<pluginpath>] [<wikipath>] [--<command> [<arg>[,<arg>]]]
For example:
tiddlywiki --version
tiddlywiki +plugins/tiddlywiki/filesystem +plugins/tiddlywiki/tiddlyweb mywiki --listen
tiddlywiki ++./mygreatplugin mywiki --listen
Introduced in v5.1.18 Commands such as the ListenCommand that support large numbers of parameters can use NamedCommandParameters to make things less unwieldy. For example:
tiddlywiki wikipath --listen username=jeremy port=8090
See Commands for a full listing of the available commands.
If you've installed TiddlyWiki on Node.js on the usual way, when a new version is released you can upgrade it with this command:
npm update -g tiddlywiki
On Mac or Linux you'll need to add sudo like this:
sudo npm update -g tiddlywiki
This readme file was automatically generated by TiddlyWiki