Title: How I Tamed My Wiki: Alphabetizing with “2dw” Duration: Approx. 60-90 seconds
| Visual | Audio (Voiceover) |
|---|---|
| [0:00-0:10] Show a screen recording of a messy, unorganized DokuWiki page. The items are random and hard to read. | (Narrator): We have all been ther. You look at your documentation, and it is a mess. It is disorganized, hard to read, and frankly, it takes *to* long to find what you need. |
| [0:10-0:20] Zoom in on the text. Show a cursor trying to manually move lines around. | (Narrator): You *no* you need to fix it. You want it in a clean, alphabetical code table. But doing that manually? That is a recipe for a sliptun—you mean to cut and paste, but you delete a line by accident. |
| [0:20-0:30] Cut to a shot of a chat interface (like Gemini). The user types a list of raw data, followed by the command “2dw”. | (Narrator): I do not do it manually anymore. I use a specific workflow. I take my raw data and I give it to my AI with a custom trigger: “2dw”. |
| [0:30-0:45] Show the AI thinking for a split second, then generating a code block. Highlight the strict DokuWiki syntax (caps, pipes, carets). | (Narrator): “2dw” is my shorthand. It tells the system to do three things instantly: 1. Alphabetize the list perfectly. 2. Format it into valid DokuWiki table syntax using pipes and carets. 3. Present it in a code box so I can copy it directly. |
| [0:45-0:55] Show the user clicking “Copy”, switching back to DokuWiki, pasting the code, and hitting “Save”. | (Narrator): No manual formatting. No missed brackets. I just copy the result right *ther* from the chat, paste it into the Wiki, and hit save. |
| [0:55-1:00] Show the final, beautiful, alphabetized table on the DokuWiki page. Fade to black. | (Narrator): Clean, alphabetical, and efficient. That is the power of the “2dw” workflow. |