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    1. Topic reply notifications added

      A few people have expressed surprise to me that there weren't any notifications when someone replied to their topics (only comments), so I've added a basic version of topic reply notifications now...

      A few people have expressed surprise to me that there weren't any notifications when someone replied to their topics (only comments), so I've added a basic version of topic reply notifications now as well. You'll get one when someone makes a new top-level comment on a topic that you posted, and they're combined in with the comment replies and shown in the same "unread notifications" page for now.

      Most of the other weirdness mentioned when I added comment replies is still around, and I'll definitely want to add some sort of "stop sending me replies for this topic" toggle eventually, but I don't think it's a big concern for now since the comment volume is still very low.

      17 votes
    2. Daily Tildes discussion - at what point should we stop auto-subscribing new users to all groups?

      Currently, when someone registers on Tildes they're automatically subscribed to all of the existing groups (except ~test). I did this because while the site is this small, it seemed like the best...

      Currently, when someone registers on Tildes they're automatically subscribed to all of the existing groups (except ~test). I did this because while the site is this small, it seemed like the best way to try to get reasonable activity in a wide range of the groups, but I absolutely don't want to keep doing it for long.

      I think it's very important that people should need to seek out groups that they're interested in, instead of being defaulted into them and needing to opt out. Here's a really old post I wrote on reddit about how being a default subscription made it impossible for /r/gaming to ever be a quality gaming subreddit, but it applies to all defaults.

      So, how should we decide when the site's starting to get active enough that we can stop the auto-subscriptions? And once we do, what do you think is a good way to start people out so that they're able to find groups they're interested in? Maybe, as mentioned in another thread earlier today, we should have a "welcome / getting started" page that new users end up on that goes over some of the important settings and helps them look into subscribing to groups?

      9 votes
    3. Regrets

      What regrets do you have in your life, minor or major? Personally, I regret signing up to a new cool website without name changes and NOT just taking the name Scar or Whom, instead making my name...

      What regrets do you have in your life, minor or major?

      Personally, I regret signing up to a new cool website without name changes and NOT just taking the name Scar or Whom, instead making my name long and awkward.

      25 votes
    4. Updated the description of the opt-in "mark new comments" feature

      Tildes has a feature that marks which comments are new in threads since you last visited (kind of like a combination of the similar gold comment-highlighting and RES features on reddit), but I've...

      Tildes has a feature that marks which comments are new in threads since you last visited (kind of like a combination of the similar gold comment-highlighting and RES features on reddit), but I've noticed that not many people are enabling it so far.

      I think the reason is that I made the label/description of it a bit too scary, and it sounded like it was some sort of tracking for the sake of tracking, without explaining the actual benefit enough. So I've updated the info now, and added a small image that shows what it does to its settings page. If you didn't already have the feature enabled because I scared you off about it, please take a look at the Settings page again and see if it makes more sense now.

      13 votes
    5. Testing markdown

      18-Nov-2011: Updated to include the latest markdown changes. ####Contents Basic text formatting (Italics, Bold, ~~Strikethrough~~, Super^script, inline code, Quoting) Linking Line Breaks &...

      18-Nov-2011: Updated to include the latest markdown changes.

      ####Contents

      1. Basic text formatting (Italics, Bold, Strikethrough, Super^script, inline code, Quoting)
      1. Linking
      2. Line Breaks & Paragraphs
      3. Lists
      4. Tables
      5. Block Code
      6. Headlines and Horizontals

      ####1. Basic Text Formatting

      Italics are created using either a single asterisk (*) or single underscore (_).

      Example:

      This is *italic text*, this is also _italic text_.

      becomes:

      This is italic text, this is also italic text.

      Bold text is created with double asterisks (**) or double underscores (__).

      Example:

      This is **bold text**, this is also __bold text__.

      becomes:

      This is bold text, this is also bold text.

      Strikethrough text is created using a double tilde (~~).

      Example:

      This is ~~strikethrough text~~.

      becomes:

      This is strikethrough text.

      Superscript text is created using the carot (^).

      Example:

      This sentence contains super^script.

      becomes:

      This sentence contains super^script.

      Note that you cannot leave space before the carot, and there is no closing tag.

      Superscript can also be stacked^like^this.

      inline code (monospaced text) is created using the backtick (grave accents) (`).

      Example:

      This sentence contains inline code: `javascript:alert("hello world");`

      becomes:

      This sentence contains inline code: javascript:alert("hello world");

      Quoting is achieved by starting a line with an Angle Bracket (>)

      Example:

      >Here's a quote.

      >Another paragraph in the same quote.
      >>A nested quote.

      >Back to a single quote.

      And finally some unquoted text.

      becomes:

      Here's a quote.

      Another paragraph in the same quote.

      A nested quote.

      Back to a single quote.

      And finally some unquoted text.

      To remove formatting you will need to use a Backslash (\)

      Example:

      This sentence escapes \*italic text\* and \*\*bold text\*\*.

      becomes:

      This sentence escapes *italic text* and **bold text**.

      ####2. Linking

      Creating a link

      Example:

      [Reddit](http://reddit.com)

      becomes:

      Reddit

      You cannot begin a link with "www", it must begin with one of the following URL schemes:

      • http://
      • https://
      • ftp://
      • mailto:
      • steam://
      • irc://
      • news://
      • mumble://
      • ssh://

      You can also provide title text for links:

      [Reddit](http://reddit.com "what's new online!").

      becomes:

      Reddit ← (hover!)

      Title text can be used to hide spoilers:

      [spoiler](/s"The spoiler text goes here")

      becomes:

      [spoiler](/s"The spoiler text goes here") ← (hover!)

      Reddit now recognises when you want to link to a subreddit.

      Example:

      This is a shameless plug for /r/BritishTV!

      becomes:

      This is a shameless plug for /r/BritishTV!

      If a URL contains brackets you will need to escape these.

      Example without escaping:

      [Cube](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube_(film))

      becomes:

      Cube ← (note the surplus bracket!)

      Example with escaping:

      [Cube](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube_(film\))

      becomes:

      [Cube](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cube_(film\)) ← (no surplus bracket!)

      ####3. Line Breaks & Paragraphs

      Line breaks in comments are achieved by adding four spaces (shown using ░) to the end of the line. Simply hitting return (shown using ↵) will not work.

      Example:

      First line↵
      Second line

      becomes:

      First line Second line

      but:

      First line░░░░↵
      Second line

      becomes:

      First line
      Second line

      Paragraphs are formed when you hit return (shown using ↵) twice.

      First Paragraph↵

      Second Paragraph

      becomes:

      First Paragraph

      Second Paragraph

      ####4. Lists

      To create Unordered Lists each item should begin with either an asterisk (*), plus sign (+) or minus sign (-).

      Example:

      * Item 1
      + Item 2
      - Item 3

      becomes:

      • Item 1
      • Item 2
      • Item 3

      Ordered Lists are created with a number and period. It doesn't matter which number you start with, as markdown will always start with 1.

      Example:

      3. Item 1
      2. Item 2
      1. Item 3

      becomes:

      1. Item 1
      2. Item 2
      3. Item 3

      The markup for Nested Lists has changed slightly:

      Example:

      1. This is Item 1
      2.
      ░░░░1. This is Item 2.1
      ░░░░2. This is Item 2.2
      3. This is Item 3
      4. This is Item 4

      becomes:

      1. This is Item 1
        1. This is Item 2.1
        2. This is Item 2.2
      2. This is Item 3
      3. This is Item 4

      Lists should be clear of any text in the line immediately above and below, the same as making a new paragraph:

      This is the wrong way to make a list

      1. lorem
      2. ispum
        reddit doesn't realize it should listify...

      becomes:

      This is the wrong way to make a list

      1. lorem
      2. ispum
        reddit doesn't realize it should listify...

      Place lists in their own paragraph:

      This is the correct way to make a list

      1. lorem
      2. ispum

      reddit realizes it should listify!

      Paragraphs in Lists and Nested lists using a combination of ordered and unordered lists, are no longer supported.

      ####5. Tables

      Tables are created using pipes (|):

      Example

      Left align | Center align | Right align
      :--|:--:|--:
      This | This | This
      column | column | column
      will | will | will
      be | be | be
      left | center | right
      aligned | aligned | aligned

      becomes:

      Left align Center align Right align
      This This This
      column column column
      will will will
      be be be
      left center right
      aligned aligned aligned

      Note that by default the first row is always bolded.

      Column Alignment is determined by the second row.

      Use ":--:" for centre aligned text, "--:" for right, and ":--" for left.

      You can also leave the top row empty, as long as you have the correct amount of pipes:

      ||
      :--|:--:|--:
      the|top|row
      is|now|empty

      becomes

      | |
      :--|:--:|--:
      the|top|row
      is|now|empty

      ####6. Block code

      Displaying block code, without formatting and in monospaced font, is as simple as starting the line with four spaces (shown using ░).

      Example:

      ░░░░line of code
      ░░░░░░░░line of code
      ░░░░░░░░░░░░line of code
      ░░░░░░░░line of code
      ░░░░line of code

      becomes:

          line of code
              line of code
                  line of code
              line of code
          line of code

      ####7. Headlines & Horizonal Rules

      Headline text can be created by using a number of hashes (#) corresponding to the tag you want. Headline tags will format all text until it encounters a Line Break or new Paragraph.

      # Headline 1
      ## Headline 2
      ### Headline 3

      becomes:

      #Headline 1
      ##Headline 2
      ###Headline 3

      NOTE: Markdown supports up to six headline tags, but only the first three have default formatting.

      To create a Horizontal Rule, simply add three asterisks (*) to an empty line.

      ***

      becomes:


      2 votes
    6. Community Resources?

      One of the most useful things about most internet communities is being able to compile resources on a particular topic and act as a hub for getting into that topic. On Reddit, this is handled...

      One of the most useful things about most internet communities is being able to compile resources on a particular topic and act as a hub for getting into that topic. On Reddit, this is handled through sidebars and wikis containing guides on how to start speedrunning, sewing, [ridiculous third example for humorous effect], etc. On imageboards, you have generals with pastebins and charts that each new version of that thread inherits. Traditional forums have a similar implementation, just slower.

      Given that groups on Tildes are not user-managed and the Reddit-style posts don't encourage the kind of infinite repeating and bumping you see on imageboard generals, I don't see how this kind of thing can take root on the site. How is this going to be managed, if there are ideas on the way?

      Of course, this is working from the assumption that this is something which the site should have. Personally, I see it as an essential measure for any site of this kind, but maybe yall don't agree.

      7 votes