This isn't a bug in Bob, it works as intended. If the behaviour isn't what you want or expect you can put a feature request on GitHub that clearly states your request. The guidelines for bugs and feature requests are here https://ooktech-public.gitlab.io/guidelines/
On Saturday, October 17, 2020 at 2:26:34 AM UTC+2 amreus wrote: > I've been testing this using Jed's BobWin.exe on Windows. It works the > same without the need to modify the server so I think I'm going to target > Bob as the server. instead of the TiddlyWiki node server. > > (There's currently a bug in bob > <https://github.com/OokTech/TW5-Bob/issues/159> that the created and > modified fields are incorrect.) > > Here's a basic bookmarklet for a bob server: > > javascript: ( > function () { > var data = { tiddlers: {'0': {'fields': {'title': window.location.href > ,'caption': document.title }}}}; > var tid = JSON.stringify(data); > var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(); > const wikiname = 'bookmarks'; > xhr.timeout = 10000; > xhr.onreadystatechange = function () { > console.log('xhr.readyState: ' + xhr.readyState); > console.log('xhr.status: ' + xhr.status); > console.log('xhr.responseText: ' + xhr.responseText); > console.log('xhr.statusText: ' + xhr.statusText); > }; > xhr.open('POST', `http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/push/${wikiname}`); > xhr.send(tid); > })(); > > > > On Monday, October 12, 2020 at 5:40:45 AM UTC-4 amreus wrote: > >> Thank you. I could use a lot of help with everything. I'm not a >> programmer - I just play around with things sometimes. The javascript is >> all very hacky and it would be nice to offer the cors as an option instead >> of having it hard-coded. I can share what I have on github if you or >> anyone else is interested. >> >> I have not tried anything other than Firefox on Windows 10. >> >> Here's an image of the fields I am grabbing. I decided to hide the >> tiddlers as system tiddlers and use the caption field for display. Also >> changed to using the URL as the unique identifier instead of the html title >> tag. >> >> There is a major downside - since you can't catch CORS errors in >> javascript, I'm not sure how to notify the user if the bookmarking fails >> for that reason. Specifically there is a problem with bookmarking Github >> pages - they are blocking the javascript and I get an error: " Content >> Security Policy: The page’s settings blocked the loading of a resource at >> inline (“script-src”)." I'm not sure if that can be overcome yet. >> >> But over-all I'm happy with how well it works. Just browse and click to >> bookmark. Then use all of the tools available in TiddlyWiki to organize >> your bookmarks. It's slightly less convenient than the built-in bookmarks >> library but vastly more powerful. >> >> On Sunday, October 11, 2020 at 9:01:23 PM UTC-4 [email protected] >> wrote: >> >>> Excellent work! I've been following you progress. I will definitely use >>> something like this in my Bookmarks plugin. >>> >>> Has this been tested in multiple browsers? I also really like how this >>> opens up the possibility to write tiddlers to a wiki-tab while your browser >>> has another tab or content in view. Mahalo (thanks)! >>> >>> Best, >>> Joshua Fontany >>> On Sunday, October 11, 2020 at 2:10:21 AM UTC-7 amreus wrote: >>> >>>> Thanks Joshua, >>>> >>>> I did figure enough of it it out to get a working bookmarklet. I had to >>>> add the right headers to the server.js file and put handler file. >>>> >>>> I'm not an expert but I think it is safe enough. The code is a >>>> bookmarklet which calls the WebServer API . The result is I can press my >>>> bookmarklet button on any page and have a tiddler created from the web >>>> page >>>> info. Kind of cool but I'm not sure how useful it really is. I think I'm >>>> motivated by curiosity and the challenge more than the utility. >>>> >>>> Here's the bookmarklet as of now: >>>> >>>> function () { >>>> var e = encodeURIComponent; >>>> var t = document.title; >>>> var u = window.location.href; >>>> var data = JSON.stringify({ "tags": "Link", "url": u }); >>>> var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest(); >>>> xhr.open('PUT', 'http://127.0.0.1:8080/recipes/default/tiddlers/' >>>> + t); >>>> xhr.setRequestHeader('x-requested-with', 'TiddlyWiki'); >>>> xhr.onreadystatechange = function () { >>>> if (xhr.readyState === 4) { >>>> console.log('xhr.status: ' + xhr.status); >>>> console.log('xhr.responseText: ' + xhr.responseText); >>>> } >>>> }; >>>> xhr.send(data); >>>> })(); >>>> >>>> On Saturday, October 10, 2020 at 11:18:36 PM UTC-4 [email protected] >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> >>>>> CORS errors are a problem when the javascript you are running is being >>>>> run from within the Browser, but is trying to access a resource that is >>>>> not >>>>> on the "same domain" as the document you are viewing. >>>>> >>>>> As long as you 100% make sure that your code is running on the >>>>> _Server_ (node.js), it can then make any modifications to the Wiki files >>>>> you need. This will then be picked up the next time the browser syncs >>>>> with >>>>> the server. >>>>> >>>>> Best, >>>>> Joshua Fontany >>>>> On Saturday, October 10, 2020 at 1:41:57 PM UTC-7 amreus wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> Is it possible to allow Cross Origin Resource Sharing when running a >>>>>> node wiki locally? >>>>>> >>>>>> I'm starting the server using the command: tiddlywiki.js <dir> >>>>>> --listen >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>>> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "TiddlyWiki" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/tiddlywiki/065f6482-8cff-4100-9e97-498bd289072cn%40googlegroups.com.

