As I've been editing the stories I'm transferring over from cohost to post on dreamwidth, I've been setting up the post ahead of time and filling in all of the tags and other info, saving the post as private, and then going back to edit and do stuff with markdown before actually posting publicly (changing it to public instead of private). I was wrongly thinking that switching a post that had always been private to public, when the editing was finished, would put it on the reading list at the present time, like it was a draft function. Obviously this isn't how it works and it keeps the timestamp of when it was initially saved privately, and shows up back on the reading list at that point in time as well. This isn't a complaint btw, I just made an assumption and it was incorrect.
Making this post to ensure others don't make the same mistake. Also of note; there's an "Update Date" button near the bottom of the post editor which updates the post's listed date and where the post falls on your MAIN page, but does not change where the post falls on the reading page (it stays locked at the date and time it was originally created with). This is good as otherwise people could spam update their posts to fill everyone's reading page.
Hope this has been useful to folks. Happy posting everyone! ^u^
Making this post to ensure others don't make the same mistake. Also of note; there's an "Update Date" button near the bottom of the post editor which updates the post's listed date and where the post falls on your MAIN page, but does not change where the post falls on the reading page (it stays locked at the date and time it was originally created with). This is good as otherwise people could spam update their posts to fill everyone's reading page.
Hope this has been useful to folks. Happy posting everyone! ^u^
no subject
Date: Oct. 13th, 2024 03:31 pm (UTC)Thoughts
Date: Oct. 13th, 2024 06:18 pm (UTC)Dreamwidth does give the option of working in either HTML or Markdown, but from what I've heard, the default is HTML and you have to put a code for switching to Markup.
There are resources for using both in Dreamwidth:
HTML Primer
Guide to HTML / CSS by
Explore Markdown
I suggest picking one thing at a time to work on until you understand it comfortably. Start with something you use all the time, or want to, like making a link. Once you have that down, move on to something new. That way, you build up skills over time, without overwhelming yourself by trying to "learn HTML" or Markup or whatever.