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Yakihonne publishes kind 30023, which is Markdown single-event articles, called "longform". Same as DecentNewsroom and Habla and Primal. Alexandria is the first with a GUI publisher for more complex documents, consisting of multiple events in a hierarchical construct called kind 30040. It treats Nostr "content pages" as individual files, and the 30040 is an (ordered) list that tells you the files inside of it, similar to a UNIX file system directory. And, as with UNIX, you can put both files and directories into directories. That's why he shows the 30040 events as πŸ“‚ folders, like in an operating system. You can put any kind of file into that directory, but kind 30041 Asciidoc is the default, and that's the one Alexandria's composer comes with, so far. We also have viewers supporting folders with 30023s in them (as a content management system for websites) and with 30818s in them (our project documentation). That's all very complicated sounding, but it's just a file system that you can choose to display hierarchically, as folders or a website, or flat, as a magazine or book or blog. You actually have the honor of having written one of Nostr's first publications: https://next-alexandria.gitcitadel.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
Silberengel's avatar Silberengel
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Yes, that's why I showed you the RauhnΓ€chte book I made. Each of your original articles was turned into a section/chapter, and the metadata (title, original author, etc.) is in the index card that lists all of the chapters in order. Then the app just pulls the index card, goes through and finds the chapters, and displays them in order. This way, you can define a structure: chapters, subchapters, preface, and appendix. And you can define anything with up to 1000 sections. We printed classic literature and scientific journals and the Bible with it, to test.