That's it! You're now equipped with all the TWiki essentials. You are ready to roll. NOTE: When first using TWiki, it will probably seem strange to be able to change other people's postings - we're used to separating individual messages, with e-mail, message boards, non-Wiki collaboration platforms. Don't worry about it. You can't accidentally delete important stuff - you can always check previous versions, and copy-and-paste from them if you want to undo any changes. After a short while, TWiki-style free-form communication becomes second-nature. You'll expect it everywhere! Related Topics: UserDocumentationCategory1. Get set...
Open two browser windows, so that you can follow these steps in one window, while trying things out in the other.2. Take a quick tour...
A TWikiSite is divided into webs; each one usually represents one area of collaboration. You can navigate the webs from the upper right corner of each web page.
- Each web has hyperlinked topics, displayed as pages in your browser.
- The home page in each web is the WebHome topic.
- To browse a TWiki web, just click on any highlighted link. These links are called WikiWords and comprise two or more words with initial capitals, run together.
- Follow the WikiWord link and learn what it is.
- If you know the name of a topic, you can jump directly to it by typing its name into the Go field on the top of the page. Type
WebSearch
to jump to the search page. Hint: Do not confuse the Go field with search.- You can search each TWiki web. Enter a search string in the WebHome topic or the WebSearch topic accessible from the
Search
link on each topic. TWiki searches for an exact match; optionally, you can also use RegularExpressions.3. Open a private account...
To edit topics, you need to have a TWiki account.
- Go to the TWikiRegistration page to create your TWiki account. Fill in a couple of lines and you're set!
4. Check out TWiki users, groups.
- Go to the TWikiUsers topic in the TWiki.Main web; it has a list of all users of TWiki. Your WikiName will be in this list after you register.
- Go to the TWikiGroups topic in the Main web; it has a list of groups which can be used to define fine grained TWikiAccessControl in TWiki.
5. Test the page controls...
The color-coded control strips at the top and/or bottom of the page has a collection of action links. Different skins show different links, but most will have some or all of::
Edit
- add to or edit the topic (discussed later)Raw View
- show the source text without editing the topicAttach
- attach files to a topic (discussed later)Backlinks
- find out what other topics link to this topic (reverse link)Printable
- goes to a stripped down version of the page, good for printingHistory
- topics are under revision control -History
shows you the complete change history of the topic, for example, who changed what and whenr3 > r2 > r1
- view a previous version of the topic or the difference between two versionsMore
- additional controls, such as rename/move, version control and setting the topic's parent.6. Change a page, and create a new one...
Go to the Sandbox. This is the sandbox web, where you can make changes and try it all out at will.
- Click the
Edit
link. You are now in edit mode and you can see the source of the page. (Go to a different topic like TWikiGuestSandbox? if you see a "Topic is being edited by an other user" warning.)- Look at the text in edit mode and compare it with the rendered page (move back and forth in your browser.)
- Tip: When you only want to see the source code of a topic click the
Raw View
link.- Notice how WikiWords are linked automatically; there is no link if you look at the text in edit mode.
- Now, create a new topic - your own test page:
- In edit mode, enter a new text with a WikiWord, for example:
This is TWikiGuestSandbox topic.
- Preview and save the topic. The name appears, highlighted, with a linked question mark at the end. This means that the topic doesn't exist yet.
- Click on the question mark. Now you're in edit mode of the new topic.
- Type some text, basically, like you write an e-mail.
- A signature with your name is already entered by default. NOTE: The
Main.
in front of your name means that you have a link from the current web to your personal topic located in the Main web.- Preview and save the topic...
- Learn about text formatting. You can enter text in TWikiShorthand, a very simple markup language. Follow the TWikiShorthand link to see how, then:
- Go back to your sandbox topic end edit it.
- Enter some text in TWikiShorthand: bold text, italic text, bold italic text, a bullet list, tables, paragraphs, etc. Hint: If you need help, click on the TextFormattingRules link located below the text box in edit mode.
- Preview and save the topic.
7. Use your browser to upload files as page attachments...
You can attach any type of file to a topic - documents, images, programs, whatever - where they can be opened, viewed, or downloaded.
- Attaching files is just like including a file with an e-mail.
- Go back to your sandbox topic and click on the
[Attach]
link at the bottom.- Click
[Browse]
to find a file on your PC that you'd like to attach; enter an optional comment; leave everything else unchecked.- Click
[Upload file]
, then scroll to the end of the page to see the new attachment listing.- Do this again - this time, upload a GIF, JPG or PNG image file.
- Check the
[Link:]
box to Create a link to the attached file at the end of the topic. The image will show up at the bottom of the topic.- To move the image, edit the topic and place the last line (containing
%ATTACHURL%
) anywhere on the page.- If you have a GIF, JPG or PNG image of yourself, your cat, your sprawling family estate...why not upload it now to personalize your account page TWikiGuest?
8. Get e-mail alerts whenever pages are changed...
WebNotify is a subscription service that automatically notifies you by e-mail when topics change in a TWiki web. This is a convenience service - for many people, checking e-mail is easier than checking the Web.
- If you're using TWiki to collaborate on a project, it's important to know when anyone on your team posts an update. If you're following a specific discussion, it's convenient to know when there's new input.
- Alerts are e-mailed as links to individual topics that've been changed in a set period: each day, every hour, whatever is configured for your system.
- It's strongly recommended that you try out the service by subscribing to each TWiki web that's relevant to you. You can subscribe and unsubscribe instantly, on a per web basis using WebNotify.
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Copyright © by the contributing authors. Bernstein - The Memory of Paper http://www.bernstein.oeaw.ac.at Ideas, requests, problems regarding Bernstein? Send feedback Note: Please contribute updates to this topic on TWiki.org at TWiki:TWiki.TWikiTutorial |