So now you know what happened to version 1. Its stable & effective & easy to get working. That's when mklauber and I agreed to call it TiddlyServer 2. Announcing v0.0.11 of TiddlyDesktop, the custom TiddlyWiki browser for Windows, Mac and Linux Featuring. The response was overwhelmingly positive, and the feedback was very helpful. Then move up to locate the parent folder, which should be called TiddlyDesktop. With the Firefox 57 Apocolypse looming, I smashed together a working prototype and posted it on the TiddlyWiki Google Group. Before experimenting with TiddlyDesktop internals you should find the location of the user configuration folder - click the Settings button on the main TiddlyDesktop window, and then click the button Open user config folder. I had already done this with ExpressJS and liked the result. This inspired me to try to build a file server which would serve data folders, but without using the somewhat cumbersome and error-prone port proxying of TiddlyServer 1. It was based on TiddlyDesktop, but was still running into bugs. I had worked with NodeJS and Apache servers for a few years already and so I got the idea to create a file server that would let you load your wikis from various places on your computer and edit and save them in any browser, not just Firefox.Īnother TiddlyWiki enthusiast (mklauber) had written TiddlyServer 1.x which had the ability to load data folders as separate node instances and proxy them alongside single file wikis. It was a massive rewrite and no longer had some of the features that we needed to be able to save TiddlyWiki files in Firefox.
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