In Office Hours today you gave the syntax for linking to a text fragment, and I found the browser extension for that. [https://web.dev/text-fragments/] But it didn't work for me on my substack article. Have you made it work on substack? I thought maybe it has been disabled here.
I got this to work in the end after much experimentation. I put a report about what I discovered on the Substack Office Page. Thanks for all your help.
It is just a general 'tool' for helping someone to get to an approximate area of a webpage. If the text=generic (Too generic - like a single letter or the word the) then simply find a word nearby to get the person to the right area of the page. A lot of the time I use Ctrl F and use the search function that is built into nearly every application.
Great entry. The tattoo is amazing.
In Office Hours today you gave the syntax for linking to a text fragment, and I found the browser extension for that. [https://web.dev/text-fragments/] But it didn't work for me on my substack article. Have you made it work on substack? I thought maybe it has been disabled here.
It worked for me on one of your articles on substack: https://lafleurproductions.substack.com/p/craig-murray-on-the-julian-assange#:~:text=incapable
Thank you for the demonstration. I'll try again.
I got this to work in the end after much experimentation. I put a report about what I discovered on the Substack Office Page. Thanks for all your help.
https://on.substack.com/p/office-hours-25/comments#:~:text=played
Hmm. Another place that is problematic.
It is just a general 'tool' for helping someone to get to an approximate area of a webpage. If the text=generic (Too generic - like a single letter or the word the) then simply find a word nearby to get the person to the right area of the page. A lot of the time I use Ctrl F and use the search function that is built into nearly every application.
Yes, I use search too, but this was useful as a work-around in the meantime for the purpose I had in mind. Thanks again for your help.