mirror of
https://github.com/Jermolene/TiddlyWiki5
synced 2024-12-27 18:40:28 +00:00
0cfef8affa
Preparatory to implementing saving changes to the server
109 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
109 lines
8.0 KiB
Plaintext
title: TiddlyWikiArchitecture
|
|
modifier: JeremyRuston
|
|
|
|
!! Overview
|
|
|
|
The heart of TiddlyWiki can be seen as an extensible representation transformation engine. Given the text of a tiddler and its associated MIME type, the engine can produce a rendering of the tiddler in a new MIME type. Furthermore, it can efficiently selectively update the rendering to track any changes in the tiddler or its dependents.
|
|
|
|
The most important transformations are from `text/x-tiddlywiki` wikitext into `text/html` or `text/plain` but the engine is used throughout the system for other transformations, such as converting images for display in HTML, sanitising fragments of JavaScript, and processing CSS.
|
|
|
|
The key feature of wikitext is the ability to include one tiddler within another (usually referred to as //transclusion//). For example, one could have a tiddler called //Disclaimer// that contains the boilerplate of a legal disclaimer, and then include it within lots of different tiddlers with the macro call `<<tiddler Disclaimer>>`. This simple feature brings great power in terms of encapsulating and reusing content, and evolving a clean, usable implementation architecture to support it efficiently is a key objective of the TiddlyWiki5 design.
|
|
|
|
It turns out that the transclusion capability combined with the selective refreshing mechanism provides a good foundation for building TiddlyWiki's user interface itself. Consider, for example, the StoryMacro in its simplest form:
|
|
{{{
|
|
<<story story:MyStoryTiddler>>
|
|
}}}
|
|
The story macro looks for a list of tiddler titles in the tiddler `MyStoryTiddler`, and displays them in sequence. The subtle part is that subsequently, if `MyStoryTiddler` changes, the `<<story>>` macro is selectively re-rendered. So, to navigate to a new tiddler, code merely needs to add the name of the tiddler and a line break to the top of `MyStoryTiddler`:
|
|
{{{
|
|
var storyTiddler = store.getTiddler("MyStoryTiddler");
|
|
store.addTiddler(new Tiddler(storyTiddler,{text: navigateTo + "\n" + storyTiddler.text}));
|
|
}}}
|
|
The mechanisms that allow all of this to work are fairly intricate. The sections below progressively build the key architectural concepts of TiddlyWiki5 in a way that should provide a good basis for exploring the code directly.
|
|
!! Tiddlers
|
|
Tiddlers are an immutable dictionary of name:value pairs called fields.
|
|
|
|
The only field that is required is the {{{title}}} field, but useful tiddlers also have a {{{text}}} field, and some or all of the standard fields {{{modified}}}, {{{modifier}}}, {{{created}}}, {{{creator}}}, {{{tags}}} and {{{type}}}.
|
|
|
|
Hardcoded in the system is the knowledge that the `tags` field is a string array, and that the `modified` and `created` fields are JavaScript `Date` objects. All other fields are strings.
|
|
|
|
The {{{type}}} field identifies the representation of the tiddler text with a MIME type.
|
|
!! ~WikiStore
|
|
Groups of uniquely titled tiddlers are contained in WikiStore objects.
|
|
|
|
The WikiStore also manages the plugin modules used for macros, and operations like serializing, deserializing, parsing and rendering tiddlers.
|
|
|
|
Each WikiStore is connected to another shadow store that is used to provide default content. Under usual circumstances, when an attempt is made to retrieve a tiddler that doesn't exist in the store, the search continues into its shadow store (and so on, if the shadow store itself has a shadow store).
|
|
!! ~WikiStore Events
|
|
Clients can register event handlers with the WikiStore object. Event handlers can be registered to be triggered for modifications to any tiddler in the store, or with a filter to only be invoked when a particular tiddler or set of tiddlers changes.
|
|
|
|
Whenever a change is made to a tiddler, the wikistore registers a `nexttick` handler (if it hasn't already done so). The `nexttick` handler looks back at all the tiddler changes, and dispatches any matching event handlers.
|
|
!! Parsing and Rendering
|
|
TiddlyWiki parses the content of tiddlers to build an internal tree representation that is used for several purposes:
|
|
* Rendering a tiddler to other formats (e.g. converting wikitext to HTML)
|
|
* Detecting outgoing links from a tiddler, and from them...
|
|
* ...computing incoming links to a tiddler
|
|
* Detecting tiddlers that are orphans with no incoming links
|
|
* Detecting tiddlers that are referred to but missing
|
|
The parse tree is built when needed, and then cached by the WikiStore until the tiddler changes.
|
|
|
|
TiddlyWiki5 uses multiple parsers:
|
|
* Wikitext ({{{text/x-tiddlywiki}}}) in `js/WikiTextParser.js`
|
|
* JavaScript ({{{text/javascript}}}) in `js/JavaScriptParser.js`
|
|
* Images ({{{image/png}}} and {{{image/jpg}}}) in `js/ImageParser.js`
|
|
* JSON ({{{application/json}}}) in `js/JSONParser.js`
|
|
Additional parsers are planned:
|
|
* CSS ({{{text/css}}})
|
|
* Recipe ({{{text/x-tiddlywiki-recipe}}})
|
|
One global instance of each parser is instantiated in `js/App.js` and registered with the main WikiStore object.
|
|
|
|
The parsers are all used the same way:
|
|
$$$.js
|
|
var parseTree = parser.parse(type,text) // Parses the text and returns a parse tree object
|
|
$$$
|
|
The parse tree object exposes the following fields:
|
|
$$$.js
|
|
var renderer = parseTree.compile(type); // Compiles the parse tree into a renderer for the specified MIME type
|
|
console.log(parseTree.toString(type)); // Returns a readable string representation of the parse tree (either `text/html` or `text/plain`)
|
|
var dependencies = parseTree.dependencies; // Gets the dependencies of the parse tree (see below)
|
|
$$$
|
|
The dependencies are returned as an object like this:
|
|
{{{
|
|
{
|
|
tiddlers: {"tiddlertitle1": true, "tiddlertitle2": false},
|
|
dependentAll: false
|
|
}
|
|
}}}
|
|
The `tiddlers` field is a hashmap of the title of each tiddler that is linked or included in the current one. The value is `true` if the tiddler is a //'fat'// dependency (ie the text is included in some way) or `false` if the tiddler is a //`skinny`// dependency.
|
|
|
|
The `dependentAll` field is used to indicate that the tiddler contains a macro that scans the entire pool of tiddlers (for example the `<<list>>` macro), and is potentially dependent on any of them. The effect is that the tiddler should be rerendered whenever any other tiddler changes.
|
|
!! Rendering
|
|
The `parseTree.compile(type)` method returns a renderer object that contains a JavaScript function that generates the new representation of the original parsed text.
|
|
|
|
The renderer is invoked as follows:
|
|
$$$.js
|
|
var renderer = parseTree.compile("text/html");
|
|
var html = renderer.render(tiddler,store);
|
|
$$$
|
|
The `tiddler` parameter to the `render` method identifies the tiddler that is acting as the context for this rendering -- for example, it provides the fields displayed by the `<<view>>` macro. The `store` parameter is used to resolve any references to other tiddlers.
|
|
!! Rerendering
|
|
When rendering to the HTML/SVG DOM in the browser, TiddlyWiki5 also allows a previous rendering to be selectively updated in response to changes in dependent tiddlers. At the moment, only the WikiTextRenderer supports rerendering.
|
|
|
|
The rerender method on the renderer is called as follows:
|
|
{{{
|
|
var node = document.getElementById("myNode");
|
|
var renderer = parseTree.compile("text/html");
|
|
myNode.innerHTML = renderer.render(tiddler,store);
|
|
// And then, later:
|
|
renderer.rerender(node,changes,tiddler,store,renderStep);
|
|
}}}
|
|
The parameters to `rerender()` are:
|
|
|!Name |!Description |
|
|
|node |A reference to the DOM node containing the rendering to be rerendered |
|
|
|changes |A hashmap of `{title: "created|modified|deleted"}` indicating which tiddlers have changed since the original rendering |
|
|
|tiddler |The tiddler providing the rendering context |
|
|
|store |The store to use for resolving references to other tiddlers |
|
|
|renderStep |See below |
|
|
Currently, the only macro that supports rerendering is the `<<story>>` macro; all other macros are rerendered by calling the ordinary `render()` method again. The reason that the `<<story>>` macro goes to the trouble of having a `rerender()` method is so that it can be carefully selective about not disturbing tiddlers in the DOM that aren't affected by the change. If there were, for instance, a video playing in one of the open tiddlers it would be reset to the beginning if the tiddler were rerendered.
|
|
|
|
|