A NakedWiki is a wiki running on its page content only -- no program-generated headers or footers. Examples are http://allmyfaqs.com/cgi-bin/htm.pl (naked view of typical wiki) (deadlink 24 apr 04) and http://hytext.com/cgi-bin/htm.pl (naked view of site developed from a wiki). Running naked shows the reliance wiki members place on the wiki wrapper functions for home page, recent changes, and search functions. For instance, a NakedWiki page will most likely have no explicit links back to the home page, making navigation a unidirectional effort. Subpages also lose their links to their parent pages, if the links are not explicitly embedded in the page content. The NakedWiki mode is useful for putting wiki content on a CDROM, converting a wiki to a Help system, developing indexing files, or publishing content developed on a wiki but intended for read-only distribution -- project specs, staff address files, inventory catalogs, documentation and how-to files, etc. Specific wiki pages fetched in NakedWiki mode can serve as dynamic content for other web pages, popping up cheerfully and well-formatted in FRAME and IFRAME contexts, making the NakedWiki mode a useful component in an intranet. Department contributors can have their updated info appear on the corporate-sanctioned intranet and internet sites with no (intervening) publishing effort on the part of the IT webmasters. A wiki may also appear in dual-mode, as a NakedWiki to visitors, but as a fully-editable wiki to contributors. You could then password-protect the editing process, but keep the results open. With no access to recent changes or other type-into-the-URL functions, access routes through the content would be controlled strictly by explicit linking. In a dual-mode NakedWiki, it would seem desirable to run with full HTML enabled for the extra pizzazz offered by even basic HTML. A dual-mode wiki could be a commercially viable venture, with visitors on subscription, and contributors paid by page-access, using the access-logging functions already built-in to the wiki (or provided by the server) to track access and credit payments. *http://allmyfaqs.com/faq.pl -- wiki mode *http://allmyfaqs.com/cgi-bin/htm.pl -- naked wiki mode, showing awkwardness of stripping out wiki header and footer navigational aids (this link does not show a wiki without header 24 apr 04) *http://hytext.com/cgi-bin/htm.pl -- naked wiki mode site, with internal navigational structure (wiki mode is passworded) MoinMoin example: MoinMoin:FrontPage?action=print Contrast RawMode. : these examples seem to be broken or ''reclothed''. Are there any working Naked Wikis? Or have they proved unpopular? -- PhilJones ---- The 0.92 version of UseModWiki has a partial implementation of an "embedded" feature. You can see a an embedded version of this page at [http://www.usemod.com/cgi-bin/mb.pl?action=browse&id=NakedWiki&embed=1]. The current implementation does not alter any of the links, however, which lead to full non-embedded versions of pages. It wouldn't be hard to alter the code to make all pages embedded, with a separate non-embedded version of the script used for editing. --CliffordAdams That's interesting! As you know, I used the separate-version solution for my experiments. I'd have to some heavy thinking about user scenarios to decide which way to go. -- JerryMuelver Somewhere between this embedded feature for each page and the current implementation is a theoretical code in which the implementer can customize each of the elements in the bars at the top and the bottom, perhaps even incrementally adding each element, depending on the config settings. --MatthewSimpson Preferably dragging and dropping them. ---- I prefer the "chess" terminology: * OpenWiki (everybody may contribute) * HalfOpenWiki (=NakedWiki; everybody may read; e.g. http://www.wikiweb.at) * ClosedWiki (read&edit only for signed-on users) -- HelmutLeitner Don't confuse presentation (header / no-header) with access restrictions (open / closed). ---- MoinMoin 0.11 features a command line tool to dump a whole wiki to static HTML pages, essentially automating the process of downloading all the ''print-mode'' views out of the wiki. Intra-wiki links are converted to relative links to the generated files, and each page gets a very small footer pointing to the FrontPage, and the title and word index, solving the dead-end problem without disturbing the plain view too much. -- JürgenHermann :Jurgen, do you know if it also creates the meta tags as well? Is the output XHTML? thanks --DennisDaniels What do you mean by '''the''' META tags? And no, currently it's not XHTML, but it will be when I'll finally refactor to produce Wiki XML. -- JürgenHermann ---- [CategoryWikiTechnology] [CategoryUncommonWikiTechnology]