TiddlyWiki is a wiki-modeled client-side single-page application written by Jeremy Ruston that is designed to be used as a personal notebook. It is a single self-contained HTML file that includes CSS and JavaScript code. When the user downloads it to their PC, TiddlyWiki can save the entered information by overwriting itself on the user's disk, at the user's request. Following TiddlyWiki conventions, users can make a new entry, called a tiddler, ...
more
Read article at Wikipedia
TiddlyWiki
Software
Programming languages used:
Similar topics in Freebase
-
Socialtext, Inc.
Socialtext Incorporated is the first wiki company and leading provider of Enterprise 2.0 solutions. Socialtext captures the best features of web-native tools called "wikis" and "weblogs" and brings them inside the enterprise to create a collaboration and knowledge tool that works the way people do.... -
PBwiki
PBWiki is the world's largest provider of hosted business wikis. PBWiki hosts over 30,000 wikis, serves millions of users per month, and 96% of its business users would recommend PBWiki to a friend. Leading companies from AT&T to WalMart, including 1/3 of the Fortune 500,... -
Dojo Toolkit
Dojo Toolkit is an open source modular JavaScript library (or more specifically JavaScript toolkit) designed to ease the rapid development of cross platform, JavaScript/Ajax based applications and web sites. It was started by Alex Russell, Dylan Schiemann, David Schontzler, and others in 2004 and... -
Pylons web framework
Pylons is an open source web application framework written in Python. It makes extensive use of the Web Server Gateway Interface standard to promote reusability and to separate functionality into distinct modules. It is strongly influenced by Ruby on Rails: two of its main components, Routes and... -
ScrewTurn Wiki
ScrewTurn Wiki is open source (GPLv2) Wiki software that runs on the Windows ASP.NET platform. It is written in C# and by default does not require a database, though SQL Server and Mysql are supported by the use of plugins. It can be considered both a Wiki and a Personal Wiki because it also has a... -
Yield Prolog
Yield Prolog lets you embed Prolog programs directly in Python, C# or JavaScript by using the yield keyword, which automatically creates iterators that you can nest, combined with Yield Prolog's Variable class which can unify a variable with other values (just like in Prolog).There is no "API"... -
WikiNi
WikiNi is Free Software under the BSD licence that offers a simple, effective and rapid way to create and manage an internet or intranet site. It is free, and may be freely redistributed and modified under the terms of the BSD licence. It is a fork of the WakkaWiki Wiki engine. Wikini is written in... -
WikiServer
WikiServer is a free (public domain) WikiEngine that is completely self-contained - it includes its own HTTP server, and so does not require CGI support, Perl, or even a separate Web server such as Apache or IIS. As such, it is one of the easiest ways to install and run a wiki; even people without... -
WakkaWiki
WakkaWiki (often shortened as Wakka) is a very small wiki engine written in PHP, that is easy to install, hack and maintain. It was originally developed by Hendrik Mans (creator of the PlanetCrap discussion community) with help from Carlo Zottmann. As of September 29, 2004, its website was down and... -
Swiki
A swiki (Squeak WIKI) is a wiki written in Squeak. They are fairly commonly used by the Georgia Institute of Technology's College of Computing as collaborative group web pages. It is also used in K-12 education and has been used successfully with 4th graders and higher. A Swiki has its own web...