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| META TOPICPARENT | name="WebHome" |    TWiki Topics  | 
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 | The basic building block of a TWiki site is called a topic, identified by a unique, hopefully descriptive, WikiWord title. It may seem easier just to call them pages, but specifically a topic is the content of a page.  The distinction seems small but will become more important as your skill using TWiki increases.  TWikiSites are built using topics. | 
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 | The basic building block of a TWiki site is called a topic, identified by a unique, hopefully descriptive, WikiWord title. It may seem easier just to call them pages, but specifically a topic is the content of a page.  The distinction seems small but will become more important as your skill using TWiki increases.  TWikiSites are built using topics. | 
|  |  Characteristics A TWiki topic is a rich information unit. Each topic has:
 name 
 instantly identify what the topic is about
 link to it from other topics just by typing in its WikiWord
 content 
 edited by simply clicking the edit link
 enter plain text, leaving a blank space between paragraphs like e-mail (all you need)
 enter simple TWiki shorthand to represent complex HTML and special TWiki variables
 enter HTML if you are familiar with it
 include links to other topics, URLs, Web sites, files, images, sounds, or anything else you can put on a regular Web page
 handy pop-up quick reference 
 do all of this through whatever web browser you are familiar with
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 Features that can be used by topics and sites include:
 
 independently determine who can see, edit, rename, move or delete topics
 set permissions by individual users and user groups
 over-ride topic, TWiki web or site
 revision control 
 topic changes are automatically saved
 efficiently stores every change made to the original version
 lets you compare and retrieve changes between any two versions, or review them all
 displays any previous version as a regular Web page or as raw topic text
 TWiki web 
 a TWiki organizational unit to which the topic belongs
 relevant when searching for a topic, referencing it or typing in its URL
 meta-data 
 hidden contextual data stored within each topic.
 parents 
 automatically links a new topic as the "child" of the topic it was created from
 hierarchical, parent-child navigation
 allows manual assignment of parent topic from a list of all topics in the local web
 offers navigation by topic parents
 backlinks 
 named referred-by (Ref-By)
 lists all topics that reference the current topic
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 TWiki Skins to customize the look of headers and footers when topics are converted to Web pages for display:
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 TWiki Skins to customize the look of headers and footers when topics are converted to Web pages for display:
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 default and user selectable per session
 fully configurable look and feel
 apply skins across an entire TWiki web, or to a single displayed page
 use included skins and easily create new ones
 try the Printableskin below: stripped down headers and footers suitable for clean hard copy plug-ins 
 new feature packages
 developer community evolving existing and new capabilities
 add-ons 
 enhanced capability without an interface to users
 FileAttachment  
 upload files through your browser to the TWiki server
 attach any type of file (documents, images, applications) for viewing online, storage or sharing downloads with others
 upload revisions of existing files with automatic backup of all previous revisions
 formatted search 
 embedded searches of topics, data and meta-data, optional regular expressions
 custom formatting for outputting lists or tables, optional layout, headings, summary, etc.
 variables 
 similar to a command line context with site wide and locally defined variables
 over-ride topic, TWiki web or site
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 The configuration of your TWiki site, skins and your personal user account can modify the way these features are used and presented to you.
 
 store database-style info alongside the free-form topic content
 accesses meta-data
 use text fields and boxes, radio buttons, pulldown selector menus, checkboxes
 create your own forms to tag topics to later search, sort and display
 renaming, moving, and deleting 
 rename a topic and automatically update all of the links to it, site-wide
 move a topic from one TWiki web to another
 safely delete a topic to a special Trash web (invisible, but recoverable from the Web server if necessary)
 many more features... 
  Creating and editing topics A primary purpose of TWiki is to make it incredibly easy for you to add and edit information on existing topics, create new topics, and link between TWiki topics.
 To modify a topic: click the Editlink in the toolbar at the bottom left of every page (using the Default skin). An editing window appears. Type away. Use the GoodStyle and TextFormattingRules links to get pop-up window help.
 Click Preview Changesto see how your edit looks. Click Save Changesto save. 
 To add a new topic: the simplest way is to type a new WikiName in an existing topic, while you're in edit mode. When the topic is saved, the new name will appear highlighted, with a ? at the end: click the ? and a new edit window appears. Enter, preview and save as usual. The new topic now exists. 
 Go back to the topic where you started, and you'll see the ? has disappeared, and your WikiWord name is now a regular link. Type it anywhere on any topic in that web, and it will be turned into a link.
  One little links rule: each topic, and its WikiWord link, belong to one unique web only. To link between webs, you must first enter the topic's web name. 
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 | Example: This is TWikiTopics, in the TWikiweb, so that's all you need to type on any topic in this web. But to link to TWikiTopics from a topic in theMainweb, you have to typeTWiki.TWikiTopics-Webname.TopicName. It's easy. | 
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 | Example: This is TWikiTopics, in the TWikiweb, so that's all you need to type on any topic in this web. But to link to TWikiTopics from a topic in theMainweb, you have to typeTWiki.TWikiTopics-Webname.TopicName. It's easy. | 
|  | Another way to add a topic is to type a new topic name in the Go box or an unknown topic URL.  You can type in either a WikiName to create the topic in the current web or Web.TopicName to create a topic in a different web than the current page.  Topics created with the Go box or URLs do not have parent meta-data defined.  Other features The color-coded toolbar at the bottom of every topic displays a series of links, including:
It looks complicated, but the basics you need to begin with are very simple to use.  The flexible and optional features are ready when you care to learn about them - the only way to confuse yourself or your site set-up and users is by using features you really don't need.  Unlike the usual expensive, complex collaboration and project management packages, TWiki is fully functional and effective just by typing in text and making WikiWord links.  All the additional features are there, but only if you need them! Attach- pops a new screen for FileAttachments Backlinks- displays all the TWiki topics with links to the current topic History- generates a page showing every change made to the current topic, with names, dates, and changes made (diffs) r3 > r2 > r1- view most recent revision and changes More- opens up a new screen containing additional controls 
 Some controls are self-explanatory and also include instructions and help links.
 Experiment. You can always Cancelan edit or (using revision control) go Back whenever you like. | 
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 Get in-depth info from the complete documentation, including the User's Guide, Configuration Manual and TWiki Reference. 
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 Get in-depth info from the complete documentation, including the User's Guide, Configuration Manual and TWiki Reference. 
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|  |  Renaming, moving or deleting topics You can rename, move and delete individual topics by clickingMoreon the control strip at the bottom of every page. The access settings for a topic, web or entire site may be disabled for one or more of the three options, depending on your site set-up and access permissions.
 Go to the top you want to change, click More > Rename/move To move or delete: select the target web (Trashto delete)from the pull-down menu (otherwise, leave on the current web) To rename: fill in a new WikiName (otherwise, leave the current topic name)
 To update links: From the list of topics that show links to the topic you're changing, uncheck each entry you DON'T want to update - only checked links will be updated;
 Click Rename/move: the topic is renamed and/or moved, and the checked links to the topic are updated.
 Any problems are listed - take note, and you can fix them later.
 If a linked topic can't be updated (it may be locked because someone's editing it), an alert will appear. You can update missed topics later by again pressing Rename/move.  Note: Deleting means moving a topic to the Trash web. Since all webs share the one Trash, name conflicts may come up.  Reviewing and Reverting RCS revision control automatically saves all topic changes. To look at earlier versions of a topic, click onDiffslink in topic commands. If you would like to revert to an earlier version or reclaim part of an earlier version, just copy from the old topic revision to the current topic revision.  This is a step by step set of instructions:
See: ManagingTopics for more details. In the Diffsview, take note of what version of the topic you want to reclaim and then return toView. Select Morein the topic commands. Under "View previous topic revision," enter the version number you want to reclaim and check "raw text format." Then click on "View revision."
 Select either the portion of that version you want to reclaim or the entire text of the topic if you want to revert completely to that version. Select Copyunder your browser'sEditmenu. Return to the most recent version of the topic and select Editfrom the topic commands. Either paste in the portion of the topic you wish to reclaimed or replace the entire text with the text you copied from the earlier version.
 Save the topic.
 Related Topics: UserDocumentationCategory, AdminDocumentationCategory
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