dendron
foam
dendron | foam | |
---|---|---|
28 | 49 | |
6,415 | 14,820 | |
0.7% | 0.6% | |
6.3 | 8.2 | |
15 days ago | 22 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dendron
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Show HN: Odin – the integration of LLMs with Obsidian note taking
Dendron shut down a long time ago: https://github.com/dendronhq/dendron/discussions/3890 The repo is up, but the project is dead.
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Tell HN: Nearly all of Evernote’s remaining staff has been laid off
5. Dendron: https://github.com/dendronhq/dendron; requires VSCode
As a programmer I liked Dendron the most but if you want it to be packed with absolute features, try Trilium Notes (but some considered it to be feature creep and bloated)
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How can I get a minimap in Obsidian like the one in VS Code shown on the right? An outline of an entire note that acts like a scroll bar when you click and drag it.
https://wiki.dendron.so for those that don’t know what I’m talking about…
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Where do you take notes?
https://wiki.dendron.so/ is a good alternative if you only want to write and organize in Markdown.
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Confluence on-premise is dead, what now?
Thanks for prompting us about OpenProject. Seems well-featured and competitive replacement of JIRA but not Confluence.
For wiki, as Confluence is, I'd rather propose something like Dendron.so[1]
1. https://wiki.dendron.so
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I *highly* recommend Obsidian for taking notes, planning, and connecting thoughts and ideas regarding your game, especially worldbuilding. It's like creating your own little Wikipedia!
There's also a new player around: Dendron, that works as a plugin around VSCode/VSCodium... I found it way lighter than Obsidian on memory. https://wiki.dendron.so/
- Dendron: Schema First Knowledge Management Inside the IDE
- Best alternative to Notion
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Cache All the Things - A PKM workflow to incrementally retain (and find) everything
This is why we created Dendron - a note-taking tool that helps people organize and refactor their notes.
- H-m-m (hackers mind map)
foam
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Vscode setup with Foam and Logseq for Digital Note Taking
Source: (1) A personal knowledge management and sharing system for VSCode - Foam. https://foambubble.github.io/foam/. (2) A personal knowledge management and sharing system for VSCode. https://github.com/foambubble/foam. (3) Loam - Visual Studio Marketplace. https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ciceroisback.loam.
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A structured note-taking app for personal use
You should have a look at Foam: https://github.com/foambubble/foam
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Ask HN: How Do You Utilize Your Personal Knowledge Base?
I started using Foam[0] a few years ago, but the more I used it, the more I dropped all the tedious bits, and it became nothing more than a big, evolving markdown repo.
When I switched from vscode (back) to vim, it has worked as well or better than it did before. I follow my own rules. I like the Zettelkasten idea of one idea per card, but if I put more related things in the same .md file, that's OK. I didn't like the flat directory structure, and so I have dirs organized by category. My /bar directory is inside my /cooking directory, and for whatever reason, that makes sense to me. Ripgrep doesn't care, and I always find what I'm looking for.
This markdown hierarchy, that still lives in a repo called "foam", has become indispensable to me.
[0] https://github.com/foambubble/foam
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How would you read your files if Obsidian disappeared?
Probably use foam https://github.com/foambubble/foam
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How do you guys document all the technical stuff of your selfhosted servers?
So I switched to FOAM and it's just clean & organized markdown files in a git repo. Self host a code server instance and I can reference it without installing something to the work machine.
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The 1st APP that you open each day?
Recently I started to configure my digital garden. Foam is a good option, Hugo Doks, No Style Please, Git-Wiki, Researcher, Thinkspace, and other themes are good for zetteltasken pages.
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Free note taking apps with support of Wikilinks
I use foam and VSCode and regularly am wow'd with what I am having it do next. I feel I am still just getting started too.
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Web Version of Obsidian
I've wondered about using obsidian with foam as a web editing fallback.
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Silver Bullet: Markdown-based extensible open source personal knowledge platform
Since the data store is markdown and can be synced with Git, you can already work with an Obsidian vault using Foam in VSCode. I do.
You do need to align some options in each, such as file naming, a header, a particular style of links, and ensure frontmatter behavior. All necessary settings exist.
https://foambubble.github.io/foam/
https://github.com/foambubble/foam/issues/46
This supports basic static file and links functionality, not extended data tools etc., of course.
- Foam, A personal knowledge management and sharing system in VSCode and GitHub
What are some alternatives?
obsidian-export - Rust library and CLI to export an Obsidian vault to regular Markdown
logseq - A local-first, non-linear, outliner notebook for organizing and sharing your personal knowledge base. Use it to organize your todo list, to write your journals, or to record your unique life.
vscode-memo - Markdown knowledge base with bidirectional [[link]]s built on top of VSCode [Moved to: https://github.com/svsool/memo]
siyuan - A privacy-first, self-hosted, fully open source personal knowledge management software, written in typescript and golang.
Trilium Notes - Build your personal knowledge base with Trilium Notes
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode
athens - Athens is a knowledge graph for research and notetaking. Athens is open-source, private, extensible, and community-driven.
vscode-markdown-editor - A vscode extension to make your vscode become a full-featured WYSIWYG markdown editor
zotero - Zotero is a free, easy-to-use tool to help you collect, organize, annotate, cite, and share your research sources.