I'm looking for a pure javascript, open-sourced, wiki implementation, preferably one using NodeJS. Where might I find it?
-
1It's currently on the todo list for docpad - github.com/balupton/docpad– baluptonSep 20, 2011 at 10:46
-
9Why was this question closed as "not constructive"?– Anderson GreenMar 16, 2013 at 2:13
-
1Anderson: see stackoverflow.com/help/dont-ask. In short, it's too broad a question for SO.– Tim LesherSep 27, 2013 at 12:51
-
4Too bad the question is closed. Tiddlywiki (tiddlywiki.com) now has a Node.js version which works quite well!– Alen SiljakFeb 17, 2015 at 12:33
-
1Although still in beta, wiki.js looks quite promising...– anon01Mar 22, 2017 at 4:40
3 Answers
I'd suggest jingo thanks to its nice design (with very sane typography), use of git as backing datastore, format compatibility with the markdown format used by github (gollum), and the fact that it's somewhat actively developed.
As of Jan 2017, Matterwiki is also actively developed.
Wiki.js is also being actively developed. It's using a git datastore, has a markdown editor, search engine and assets management.
Tiddlywiki can generate static HTML.
Npmjs and GitHub reveal only two other relatively popular and somewhat active projects: openKB and Hazel.
Wikipedia shows mostly the same JS wiki engines, plus Grokla, which is closed source.
Wikimatrix lists 7 wiki engines powered by JavaScript.
Old answer: https://github.com/gjritter/nodewiki (no updates since 2010).
-
4nodewiki seems out of date; it could use an update to using current libraries and such May 11, 2011 at 1:05
http://nodebits.org/wiki-challenge
Uses file system https://github.com/nodebits/wiki-challenge
Git based wiki system for markdown files https://github.com/nhoss2/nodewiki
Git based https://github.com/claudioc/jingo
Here's a very recent Node.js one: https://github.com/milani/node-gitwiki. Needs work I think.
But if you just want HTML5+CSS+JavaScript, then http://www.tiddlywiki.com/ does without a remote server, all via an in-browser web app. Pretty cool :-)
-
-
@DanDascalescu ...but tiddlywiki is still going strong and has node.js support, see the node.js tab of tiddlywiki.com/#GettingStarted:GettingStarted– w00tAug 5, 2015 at 13:31
-