+it with ikiwiki, it would need to know about MarkDown. Wikiwyg does allow
+defining the text that is stuck on each side of a given html element to
+make it wikified, for example, it can add "# " for a h1, "[[" and "]]" for
+a link, etc. This seems easily doable.
+
+The other thing that would need doing is a `saveChanges` function would
+need to be implemented that saves the text back to ikiwiki.
+http://svn.wikiwyg.net/code/trunk/wikiwyg/share/Kwiki/lib/Wikiwyg/Kwiki.js
+seems like a good starting point for building a submit form on the fly.
+
+One other problem: Wikiwyg works by parsing html from a div, turning it
+back into the wiki markup, and editing/saving that. That seems to assume
+that there's a way of parsing a page's html and getting back to the underlying
+wiki markup, which is not always the case in ikiwiki. Unless there's some
+other way to feed it the actual source for a page, this seems like a
+problem. According to the developers, it is possible to do that, and start
+off in WikiText mode.
+
+[[tag soc]]
+
+[[tag wishlist]]
+
+[[tag patch]]
+
+Project IkiWiki::WIKIWYG v0.8 - <http://ikiwiki.xbaud.com/>
+===========================================================
+
+[Wikiwyg][] is a "What you see is what you get" editor for wikis. It will allow you to double click on the text in a wiki and save it without reloading the page. The IkiWiki version will allow you to edit your wiki in Markdown or WYSIWYG.
+
+The plugin can be downloaded from <http://ikiwiki.xbaud.com/wikiwyg-0.8.tar.gz>
+
+### Current Issues
+
+* Code sections starting with 4 spaces do not work
+* Adding links in the WYSIWYG editor is difficult
+* Double lists don't work
+
+[Wikiwyg]: http://www.wikiwyg.net/