![]() ![]() ![]() woff documents are web fonts (Web Open Font Family), which are fonts that are compressed and can be included in a web page. Using custom css styles helps me achieve that much more effectively in the text pane ( besides the other solid views with their powerful features tinderbox offers. ![]() The purpose here is visualizing and structuring data. And I really would of like to see it styled directly in tinderboxs text pane and not use another markdown viewer to render it. Very straight forward process but I do not understand the intricacies of using css files if you’d take me in a diff app, so you are correct there.Īll I want to achieve is for the text in tinderbox to look like the text in Typora when using various styles, that’s it. As far as Typora is concerned I just copy and paste text with a chosen theme and do minimal theme changes in BBEdit. I think I got the basics of modyfing css styles but like you’ve mentioned, I do need to get familiar with how css works. Since the web is full of examples of using CSS with markdown, there should be good advice to be found. You are on the right path of modifying style.css, but you’ll want to get familiar with how CSS works. There are other CSS-friendly markdown rendering flavors that can be made to work with Tinderbox.īut before diving into that, I suggest it would be helpful to know more about your particular requirements. Markdown wasn’t developed for using stylesheets – in particular the Gruber version that’s built into Tinderbox which is the original and somewhat minimalistic engine. Do you want to style text like your examples? Do you have a particular sample Tinderbox file you want to work with?īe aware, styling (with CSS) is far more effective – and easier – if you export and/or preview with HTML. I would be happy to write up some examples, but I’m not sure what you want to accomplish. Your examples: did you copy pages from the Tinderbox manual and style them by hand? Or did you generate them in HTML with CSS? Or something else? I don’t know maybe there is a way to actually do all of that, and if there is one, then maybe someone could be kind enough to give me a little guidance? maybe there are other ways to preview text in interesting and helpful ways? Below are some screenshots showing some styles and how they can be implemented in so many ways. Just as shapes/adornments can be customized in so many ways in Map view to better make sense of higher level information, so can customizable markdown styles can be used to visualize and make sense of lower atomic text level data in the standalone text view pane. I know Tbx focuses more on its function capabilities rather than “looks” (as I’ve read in some other post) but I find custom css themes tremendously helpful when structuring, visualizing, and analyzing information in the standalone text pane. However, there is a very powerful way to structure, analyze, and visualize information in the text pane as well using custom markdown css styles, at least in my personal experience. I love Tbx’s ability to transform all kinds of data into structured information using all the different views (Maps, Outlines, Atribute browsers, charts…) and their amazing capability to collect (such as Agents), analyze (links, aliases, hover captions…) and visualize (adornments, shapes, you name it) all sorts of information. I’ve tried fiddling with the markdown prototype template but I am also to inexperienced with using Tinderbox to really grasp its functionalities. Is there any way to preview text using custom css theme styles other than the basic one that comes with Tbx? I’ve looked around and even tried to replace the style.css file in the Markdown Tbx resource folder and nothing really happens (most likely due to the fact that I don’t really know what I’m doing). ![]()
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