We can watch people move smoothly through wiki but find it difficult to do the same ourselves. This is because what you do with a mouse, and where, makes a difference.
I Jeff Miller am realizing that the shift-click maneuvers are unfamiliar to me (vs. right-click) because I am used to a one-handed navigation convention. I know shift-click for manipulating lists or as a shortcut for selecting the end of a linear flow for copy or cut.
# Hover
Hover over a link to see where wiki will look.
Hover over a title flag to see where its from.
Hover over a Journal action to see when.
Shift-hover over a Journal action to see what changed. _To see which other Journal actions affected the same paragraph?_
Shift-hover over an item to see what actions apply. _All I see is a yellow highlight, taking item to include paragraphs._
# Click
Click a title flag to start over at welcome.
Click a link to replace following pages with a new one.
Shift-click a link to add a page to the lineup.
Click an action to open that version of a page.
Shift-double-click a Map to add a marker.
_Shift-double-click a text paragraph to convert it to Markdown and render it. I think that's what I'm seeing, anyway._
Click the footer neighbor flag to open its welcome page.
Click the footer lock to login or out.
Click the footer "wiki" to enable or disable editing.
Click the page margin to close the text editor.
Right-Click and Open in New Tab will likely fail. Try Shift-Click.
# Drag
Drag an item to move it with or between pages.
Shift-drag an item to copy it between pages. ??
Drag a title flag to a new tab to view it there.
Drag the space after a title to change the lineup.
# Type
Type left and right arrow to scroll the lineup.
Type cmd-i (ctrl-i, alt-i per OS) to open About pages from the text editor.
Type esc (cmd-s, ctrl-s, alt-s) to save and close the text editor.
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Note: many plugins interpret these commands in unique ways. Often these display with a border and the usual meaning apply when pointing there. See the About pages for special commands.