💾 Archived View for mkf.flounder.online › gemlog › 2022-01-22-wiki1.gmi captured on 2024-06-16 at 12:49:29. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-01-29)
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So looking at flounder, and at all the stuff about formatting that i use extensively on wiki1, at how i need redirections for a wiki, and how flounder may give me a lot for general audience in case of gemlog (nice index, rss, stuff like that), it doesn't really give me much in case of my wiki. So I decided I wanted it HTML after all.
I was long fascinated by Seamonkey Composer. The tags view seemed very appealing (it turned out not to be too pleasant to use as I imagined it, after all). It seemed to have the options for preserving source formatting of edited files.
So I did a cleanup of wiki1. And I decided to add mostly-global css. But since I wanted to have the css work locally for me, I do link rel stylesheet relatively (../, ../../, ../../../..) in all subpages that i apply it to; so that's not quite neat.
And Seamonkey composer sometimes happened to just delete the link rel stylesheet line for me on save? Besides always adding newlines to all blank lines whenever i saved from Source pane (saving switches the user to the wysiwyg pane always) back when i still had any belief in the "Preserve original source formatting option". And it keeps adding HTML 4.01 doctype for me. And all links have a `moz-do-not-send="true"` attribute.
And whenever I drag or paste a link it makes it absolute, including my local file:///C:/Users path prefix in the href attr, so I have to right-click Link properties and checkbox relative to restore it.
And some stuff are hidden in menus without a keyboard shortcut? Like tags like <code>?
So yea I get quite an ergonomic penalty there. But I feel i still may feel better in it? Some stuff about source editing I just had too much of I think.
See
Cheers
~Mika