These quick enhancements are aimed at improving and customising your TWiki. New TWiki site administrators are especially encouraged to review this document for ideas before deploying a new TWikiSite. The metaphor of building a house is useful. The listed enhancements are some of the details possible when moving into a new office or home. These small changes can make a big differences for user satisfaction at your site. All modifications can be done through your Web browser, and they don't take more then in a couple of minutes. No system administration expertise is required. Some of these enhancements are also mentioned in the reference manual and other topics.
Many of these tips are based on setting some special TWikiVariables.
We recommend implementing at least some of these enhancements right after installation to get a taste for what is possible. Some of these tips and enhancements should be implemented before or during initial roll-out.
This may spark your imagination to really customize your site so that it's optimal for your users. Slightly more advanced customization tips are listed in TWiki:TWiki.TWikiAdminCookBook.
TWikiVariables are a great resource to customize your site. You need to know the variable name and decide where to put it.
Change Colors of Page Header/Footer
Incredibly obvious, maybe, but some TWiki site admins don't get around to changing the default web colors right off, whether they like them or not. Simply changing the defaults will make a huge difference in the overall look.
What we are doing
We want to set variable WEBBGCOLOR in topic WebPreferences to one of the StandardColors. WebPreferences is, as you can guess, a topic which holds all kind of preference setting for each TWiki Web{*}. Each web has its own WebPreferences, and you can set them differently for each web.
How to do it
Pick color code from company or product references, the StandardColors table (recommended for 8-bit client compatibility), or some other color reference.
Set your preferred WEBBGCOLOR preferences variable, and save the topic.
Add a new line immediately after the color code. If there is (invisible) space after the color code, the page header might get strange colors (e.g. black).
It's just as easy to refine later on, so you're not locked in, just looking better.
Set Page Background Color
Without getting into the TWikiTemplates system yet, you can easily edit the view.tmpl (in the templates directory). In the HTML at the top, the body tag has the page background hardcoded to white bgcolor="#ffffff". You can change that color value to new variable. First, define a new preferences variable in the site-level Main.TWikiPreferences, e.g. * Set =PAGEBGCOLOR = #d0d0d0, then edit the view.tmpl template file and change bgcolor="#ffffff" to bgcolor="%PAGEBGCOLOR%". If you want, you can set the page background color individually per web, simple add a * Set =PAGEBGCOLOR = #d0d0d0 bullet to the WebPreferences to overload the site-level preferences. (Without font color control, you'll have to stick to light colors.)
Titles-Only Topic List - WebTopicList
WebTopicList is a good first navigation tool for new users, a fast-loading linked list (page titles only) of a web's topics is a quick and easy way see what's available. By default, slower, but more powerful WebIndex is used.
Without explaining what WEBTOPICLIST is, just try it:
In WEBTOPICLIST variable, replace WebIndex with WebTopicList, and save.
Simple way to create colored text and graphics
This should be enabled, see the "Miscellaneous Settings" in the TWikiPreferences, . If not, look at TWiki:TWiki/TWikiPreferences. Look for variables RED, BLUE etc (which define HTML tag FONT). To copy/paste the variables defining the colors you need to see the source text, but Edit is disabled. Instead, go to More and view the topic in raw format.
EZ Graphic Icons to Highlight Text
Icons can do a lot to enhance scannability of topics. For instance, on HELP pages, most people tend to jump around looking for answers rather than reading through - icons help point out the most important bits.
TWikiDocGraphics has a whole collection of ready icon images. You can use these images in any topic by referring to their name. For example, TWikiDocGraphics has an image attachment called days.gif. To show this image in a topic, write %ICON{"days"}% to get .
Creating image variables
You may find it easier to write shorthand graphic notation. You can create your own image variables by defining them in a preference topic (most likely Main.TWikiPreferences.)
A variable name may be one letter, like Y, or may be longer like HELP, WARN etc. You can also add your own images, e.g. a NEW, or a ASK to ask question.
For instance, if we want to write %DOWN% instead of %ICON{"arrowbdown"}%, define the new variable like this:
* Set DOWN = %ICON{"arrowbdown"}%
Or if you have a custom image to use, attach this to Main.TWikiPreferences and write:
* Set DOWN = <img src="%ATTACHURL%/my_image.gif" border="0" alt="DOWN" width="16" height="16" />
Related: There are other approaches for creating more extensive TWiki icon libraries. This is a simply and quick way to get started. See TWikiDocGraphics for more info.
Use TOC variable to create table of content
TOC is Table-Of-Content, generated automagically from headers (defined like that: ---++ , see TWikiShorthand).
For example, you may want to put all your custom variables in Main.TWikiPreferences right on top of the page, and generate table of contents, like:
Preferences for easy creating nice pages
Graphics icons in text
Colored text
System Preferences
Contents of page header and footer
User interface defaults
Email
Plugins
Notes
Non-admin users wil be interested only in first part, non-system preferences.
Personal Productivity - Tools and Tips for Working Faster
Although this area applies to all TWiki setups, the initial focus is on TWiki site managers working on a Linux/Apache TWiki site, from a Windows local PC. The assumption being: if you're working with Linux as your desktop, you're probably a programmer or system admin and have these basics handled!
Use your favorite text editor for major edits
When you have a fair bit of TWiki formatting work - for example, compiling new info pages from various cut'n'paste sources, editing multiple TWiki topics or contributed material - it's often easier to use a real TextEditor instead of the browser's text edit box. There are several methods for doing this. For Windows, there are several well-recommended text editors.
Windows Example:TextPad is a low-cost, top flight Windows program, with an extended trial period. You can download from a well-stocked library of user-contributed macros, dictionaries, and syntax and clip files. You can also easily create a TWiki clip collection that allows you to format text with TWiki code: select a text string and click for bold, italic, links, bullet lists - just like a regular HTML editor - and also insert blocks of TWiki code, use simple or regex search and replace, more.
Copy & Paste: Using the web window this can work very well. System differences may present difficulties with this method but it is simple and reliable in most cases.
Browser Integration: Some web browsers can be configured to automatically use an external editor. See your browser documentation for details. Such a configuration and a small tool for Linux is described in an example on TWiki.org. TWiki:Codev/EditDaemonWithGVimIntegrationAlternate Browser: While your main browser might not have the features for TWiki topic editing, another one might.
An example on the Linux platform is the w3m pager/browser for Linux. This is a text based version similar to lynx but it includes text editor features and a configurable command set to act like lynx if you are more accustomed to it.
Ready to use SEARCH
Personal directory of topics you're involved in
Here's how you can create your own personal directory of topics you've contributed to recently. Copy the text below (between Start Copy and End Copy) and paste it into your personal page (TWikiGuest). You can add other webs to search by duplicating one of the web subsections and editing the string {web ="webname"} in the search parameters to refer to the specific web you want to search. This script would also work for a group.
Start Copy
__Here's a list of topics I've been involved in recently:__
---++++ Codev
%SEARCH{ "%TOPIC%" web="Codev" scope="text" nosearch="on" nosummary="on" noheader="on" nototal="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" limit="20"}%
---++++ Support
%SEARCH{ "%TOPIC%" web="Support" scope="text" nosearch="on" nosummary="on" noheader="on" nototal="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" limit="20"}%
---++++ TWiki
%SEARCH{ "%TOPIC%" web="TWiki" scope="text" nosearch="on" nosummary="on" noheader="on" nototal="on" sort="modified" reverse="on" limit="10"}%
End Copy
The SEARCH variable has many more formatting options, see TWikiVariables.
Recently changed pages
Here are the last 15 changed pages, formatted into a neat table.
When you're creating main gateway pages, you may want to temporarily (or permanently) restrict editing to yourself or a limited group of people. You can do this with a Preference setting that includes one or more users and groups. Only auhorized users will be able to use Edit.
To hide the setting: Use HTML comment tags - put <!-- on the line _above the setting, and --> on the line below.
Change the Default Logo
If you want to change the logo per TWiki web, simply attach a new logo.gif to the web's WebPreferences, and change the logo's filename by overriding the name using WEBLOGONAME in WebPreferences:
Set WEBLOGONAME = filename.gif
Other customizations are possible using WEBLOGOIMG, WEBLOGOURL, and WEBLOGOALT (they mirror the WIKILOGO* TWiki variables, but are applied to each web, rather than to the %WIKITOOLNAME%-based references)
If you'd like to have the same customized logo for all the webs, make these changes in TWikiPreferences instead of each web's WebPreferences, e.g.,
Set WEBLOGOIMG = %PUBURLPATH%/Main/WebPreferences/mylogo.gif
Customize Topic Classification Forms
With a simple one or two-line default topic form available for every topic - in the "More topic actions" screen, follow the "Add or replace form on this topic" link, and select the form if it isn't already enabled. Then, edit the topic, and carefully change values, probably basic page classifications. You'll get some increased value, and hands-on experience with TWikiForms, without having to read up about them first. (add the corresponding search per category - copy a default and change)
Add Your Favorite JavaScript Features
You're no doubt familiar or better with HTML, JS, and "webmastering". Without getting into the TWikiTemplates system yet, you can easily edit the view.pattern.tmpl (if you are using default pattern skin) (in the templates directory) for some dramatic effects. The top of the template is mostly regular HTML with some variables. Open up some space in the <head> area, and you can drop in reliable JavaScripts - a pop-up window script, for example - or tag it as an external script.
Obviously, you can do the same - place a link to an external stylesheet as well. If you set values for standard HTML tags, you can control a good deal of the type size, style and color with out adding CSS tags. example
Depending on what you load up, you may change the overall cross-browser compatibility - however be careful that your site does not look beat up in various other browsers. The scripts you choose will determine compatibility.