tag:support.fletcherpenney.net,2013-02-12:/discussions/suggestions/337-indexes-and-tagsMultiMarkdown: Discussion 2021-05-09T18:18:07Ztag:support.fletcherpenney.net,2013-02-12:Comment/470268362019-03-03T20:46:22Z2019-03-03T20:46:22ZIndexes and Tags<div><p>Thanks for writing in!</p>
<ol>
<li>
<p>MultiMarkdown doesn't support a direct to Word export format, so nothing I do will affect Word. The closest is the OpenDocument format.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>I've thought about indexing, but I worry that manually flagging every important word for indexing is time consuming, error-prone, and ugly to look at (counter to the original Markdown philosophy of avoiding text that looks like it has been marked up for a computer.) It seems that other tools that are specifically designed for indexing are better suited to this. There is also not an analogy for indexing in HTML, and I try to limit anything that does not have reasonable support across output formats. Finally, as search becomes so much easier and widespread, indexing seems to be less and less relevant to the majority of users. I realize that there is variability amongst fields, but I very rarely use an index when "Command-F" will likely get me where I need to go much faster. I'm not saying never, but I think this may be a feature whose time has passed??</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>You can already add whatever you want to documents, including tags in the metadata. MultiMarkdown Composer, for example, supports synchronizing the macOS tags on a file with the MultiMarkdown metadata <code>tags:</code> in the text. Older versions of MultiMarkdown were more strict about using a particular metadata for tags/keywords and outputting to particular syntax in the output files. I didn't add this to MultiMarkdown-6 and no one has commented on it.</p>
<p>Is there a particular output format that you need changed to provide different support for tags?</p>
</li>
</ol>
<p>F-</p>
<p>-- Fletcher T. Penney<br>
<a href="mailto:fletcher@fletcherpenney.net">fletcher@fletcherpenney.net</a></p></div>fletchertag:support.fletcherpenney.net,2013-02-12:Comment/470268362019-03-04T10:27:37Z2019-03-04T10:27:38ZIndexes and Tags<div><p>Hi</p>
<ol>
<li>
<p>Thanks for the note about MS Word - I use IA Writer that uses MMD underneath and exports directly to Word - hence my comment</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>With the indexing I was thinking that it would be the first occurrence of the term and let the rendering find other occupants - making it less burdensome but I agree that it goes against the philosophy. That said whilst search (Command-F) is great it is very hard to use in a print version :-) which is my ultimate target in my current use case.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>My error here was that I assumed that metadata was being handled by IA Writer when exporting - however it ignores all metadata - something of a surprise to me and I shall ask them about</p>
</li>
</ol>
<p>Thanks again for your help</p>
<p>David M Walker</p></div>David M Walkertag:support.fletcherpenney.net,2013-02-12:Comment/470268362019-03-04T11:16:51Z2019-03-04T11:16:51ZIndexes and Tags<div><p>Ah....</p>
<p>If iA writer is going directly from MultiMarkdown to Word, they are probably using built in Apple format conversion support. Which is a terrible way to do it, and something I stopped doing many years ago. The results are abysmal (at least they used to be.) Footnotes aren't handled properly. Neither are internal links. All semantic meaning is lost (e.g. headers). TOC is not native. And much more. (Again -- unless Apple has finally upped their game in this regard, which is doubtful.)</p>
<p>(Apple's approach involves converting MultiMarkdown to HTML, and then using built-in Apple code to convert from HTML to other formats such as RTF or Word. My approach is to go directly from MultiMarkdown to other formats, maintaining control of the final result.)</p>
<p>The best results if you absolutely need to get a document into Word (another abysmal program, but that's a different story.... ;) is to use MultiMarkdown to generate an OpenDocument file. LibreOffice can then convert OpenDocument to just about any popular text editor format while still preserving the proper formatting. This includes RTF or Word formats. Try this, and I suspect you'll be very surprised by the results.</p>
<p>(Oh, and forget about indexing using Apple's approach and wanting me to add indexing support or anything like that. ;)</p>
<p>Fletcher</p>
<p>-- Fletcher T. Penney<br>
<a href="mailto:fletcher@fletcherpenney.net">fletcher@fletcherpenney.net</a></p></div>fletcher