Wiki4print: Difference between revisions

This page was last edited on 21 December 2023, at 13:44.
(Created page with " __TOC__ ==About wiki-to-print== Wiki-to-print is a collective publishing environment based on MediaWiki software<ref>https://www.mediawiki.org</ref>, Paged Media CSS<ref>https://www.w3.org/TR/css-page-3/</ref> techniques and the JavaScript library Paged.js<ref>https://pagedjs.org</ref>, which renders a preview of the PDF in the browser. Using wiki-to-print allows us to work shoulder-to-shoulder as collaborative writers, editors, designers, developers, in a non-linear p...")
 
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Following the idea of "boilerplate code" which is written to be reused, we like to think of wiki-to-print as a boilerplate as well, instead of thinking of it as a product, platform or tool. The code that is running in the background is a version of previous ''wiki-printing'' instances, including:
Following the idea of "boilerplate code" which is written to be reused, we like to think of wiki-to-print as a boilerplate as well, instead of thinking of it as a product, platform or tool. The code that is running in the background is a version of previous ''wiki-printing'' instances, including:


* Varia's<ref>https://varia.zone</ref> version of ''wiki-to-print''<ref>https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/varia/wiki-to-print</ref> installed on the CC server<ref>https://cc.vvvvvvaria.org/</ref>, which is maintained by Simon Browne and Manetta Berends
* Hackers and Designers'<ref>https://hackersanddesigners.nl</ref> version ''wiki2print''<ref>https://github.com/hackersanddesigners/wiki2print</ref> that was produced for the book Making Matters<ref>https://hackersanddesigners.nl/s/Publishing/p/Making_Matters._A_Vocabulary_of_Collective_Arts</ref>
* TITiPI's<ref>http://titipi.org</ref> ''wiki-to-pdf'' environments<ref>https://titipi.org/wiki/index.php/Wiki-to-pdf</ref> by Martino Morandi
* the book Volumetric Regimes<ref>http://data-browser.net/db08.html + https://volumetricregimes.xyz</ref> by Possible Bodies<ref>https://possiblebodies.constantvzw.org</ref> and Manetta Berends<ref>https://manettaberends.nl</ref>
* the work on the Diversions<ref>https://diversions.constantvzw.org</ref> publications by Constant<ref>https://constantvzw.org</ref> and OSP<ref>https://osp.kitchen</ref>
* the work on the Diversions<ref>https://diversions.constantvzw.org</ref> publications by Constant<ref>https://constantvzw.org</ref> and OSP<ref>https://osp.kitchen</ref>
* the book Volumetric Regimes<ref>http://data-browser.net/db08.html + https://volumetricregimes.xyz</ref> by Possible Bodies<ref>https://possiblebodies.constantvzw.org</ref> and Manetta Berends<ref>https://manettaberends.nl</ref>
* TITiPI's<ref>http://titipi.org</ref> ''wiki-to-pdf'' environments<ref>https://titipi.org/wiki/index.php/Wiki-to-pdf</ref> by Martino Morandi
* Hackers and Designers'<ref>https://hackersanddesigners.nl</ref> version ''wiki2print''<ref>https://github.com/hackersanddesigners/wiki2print</ref> that was produced for the book Making Matters<ref>https://hackersanddesigners.nl/s/Publishing/p/Making_Matters._A_Vocabulary_of_Collective_Arts</ref>
So, wiki-to-print/wiki-to-pdf/wiki2print is not standalone, but part of a continuum of projects that see software as something to learn from, adapt, transform and change. The code that is used for making this journal is released as yet another version of this network of connected practices<ref>https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/varia/wiki-to-print</ref>.


This wiki-to-print is hosted at CC<ref>https://cc.vvvvvvaria.org</ref> (''creative crowds''). While moving from ''cloud'' to ''crowds'', CC is a thinking device for us how to hand over ways of working and share a space for publishing experiments with others.
So, wiki-to-print/wiki-to-pdf/wiki2print/wiki4print is not standalone, but part of a continuum of projects that see software as something to learn from, adapt, transform and change.


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Revision as of 13:44, 21 December 2023

About wiki-to-print

Wiki-to-print is a collective publishing environment based on MediaWiki software[1], Paged Media CSS[2] techniques and the JavaScript library Paged.js[3], which renders a preview of the PDF in the browser. Using wiki-to-print allows us to work shoulder-to-shoulder as collaborative writers, editors, designers, developers, in a non-linear publishing workflow where design and content unfolds at the same time, allowing the one to shape the other.

Following the idea of "boilerplate code" which is written to be reused, we like to think of wiki-to-print as a boilerplate as well, instead of thinking of it as a product, platform or tool. The code that is running in the background is a version of previous wiki-printing instances, including:

  • Varia's[4] version of wiki-to-print[5] installed on the CC server[6], which is maintained by Simon Browne and Manetta Berends
  • Hackers and Designers'[7] version wiki2print[8] that was produced for the book Making Matters[9]
  • TITiPI's[10] wiki-to-pdf environments[11] by Martino Morandi
  • the book Volumetric Regimes[12] by Possible Bodies[13] and Manetta Berends[14]
  • the work on the Diversions[15] publications by Constant[16] and OSP[17]

So, wiki-to-print/wiki-to-pdf/wiki2print/wiki4print is not standalone, but part of a continuum of projects that see software as something to learn from, adapt, transform and change.

Create a wiki-to-print environment


 


Links to get started with

Wiki-to-print boilerplates

Created wiki-to-print environments

These are some wiki-to-print environments that have been used so far:

wiki-to-print log

See the issue tracker of the git repository: https://git.vvvvvvaria.org/varia/wiki-to-print/issues