/*
Copyright 2020 Adam Gray
This file is part of the tagem program.
The tagem program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or
modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the
Free Software Foundation version 3 of the License.
The tagem program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but
WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
This copyright notice should be included in any copy or substantial copy of the tagem source code.
The absense of this copyright notices on some other files in this project does not indicate that those files do not also fall under this license, unless they have a different license written at the top of the file.
*/
R"=========(
Suppose you have a screenshot of a Twitter post. You can get the link to the original post - for instance, by using find-tweet. You can then go to that file, click "Update src", and change the source to the Twitter post's URL. This will keep the screenshot as a 'backup' of the post.
Suppose you wish to record some snippets of C++ code. You can open the text editor, paste the code into the main content section, name the file, tag it 'C++', then select a remote directory. ANY remote directory can be used, however I would suggest creating a 'directory' named "Code Snippets" - specifically ommitting the protocol and other unnecessary parts - specifically for code snippets like these. When this 'file' is saved, it creates a record in the database, with the contents as the 'file' description - no content is written to an actual file aside from the database.
)========="