org-roam
ripgrep-all
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org-roam | ripgrep-all | |
---|---|---|
147 | 43 | |
5,322 | 6,146 | |
0.8% | - | |
3.5 | 8.0 | |
about 2 months ago | about 2 months ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
org-roam
- Maintenance Status [of Org-Roam]?
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Ask HN: What do you use for note-taking or as knowledge base?
I keep absolutely everything in a single folder. Saved documents, images, movies, financial records, game saves, it doesn't matter. My hierarchical naming scheme takes care of organization. On the odd occasion I actually need a folder, I just append ".d" to the filename.
I use . as a hierarchy delimiter, so file extensions are just part of the hierarchy, and I can have multiple files with the same name except for the extension. For example, "film.spongebob.png" is a photo of spongebob, "film.spongebob.org" is a note about spongebob, and "film.spongebob.s1.e7" is my favorite episode.
I use org-roam [1] for note-taking and task/time-management. I absolutely require a plain-text system so it either had to be markdown or org-mode. Emacs was the deciding factor, else I would have still been using Dendron [2]
If OneNote is your thing, I'd probably recommend Obsidian [3] over org-roam. Despite it being the greatest program ever created, Emacs is a lot to learn "just" for taking notes.
If you like VS Code, check out Dendron. It's the one that got me into more serious PKMS instead of just chucking notes in a folder all willy nilly.
- [1]: https://www.orgroam.com/
- [2]: https://www.dendron.so/
- [3]: https://obsidian.md/
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Org-roam: find "linkable" text in node
I'm using org-roam to keep my notes, which generally works well for me. There's one thing I am missing and I'm wondering if I just overlooked it, or whether it simply doesn't exist.
- Think in Analog, Capture in Digital
- Org-Roam
- Welche Note taking/Wiki App nutzt ihr, falls überhaupt?
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Bi-directional links in org mode?
Org-Roam is a Roam-inspired Emacs mode that builds on top of org mode. Every node (aka note) has a unique ID that's different from its name. Every link from node A to node B actually links to the ID, so you can change node B's name without affecting the link. When you're on node B, you can open the Roam buffer and it will show you all of the links that point to that node.
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Useful programs
Org Mode. I can export my notes to LaTeX or HTML and keep things tidy in a zettelkasten with org-roam.
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What should I use to take notes in college?
Of course, the real power-user move would be to use Emacs with Org-Roam, but you have to be prepared to dive deep into the rabbit-hole. If you don't, it won't be worth it. If you do, you'll be handsomely rewarded. I know because I have, and I can highly recommend it if you like tinkering with and customising your tools. IMO, Doom Emacs is the way to go nowadays.
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Has anyone here with ADHD or similar issues used org-mode to get your life on track?
I'd highly recommend Org-roam. It's what has enabled me to actually start consistently keeping notes (and being able to retrieve/access them later). It's very easy with Org-roam to quickly add new notes, or add information to old notes, and the links/backlinks make (re)discoverability very easy.
ripgrep-all
- Ripgrep-all: rga: ripgrep, but also search PDFs, E-Books, Office documents, zip
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Ripgrep is faster than {grep, ag, Git grep, ucg, pt, sift}
I searched in portage, and it seems there is another version working also with other documents like PDFs and doc.
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Calibre – New in Calibre 7.0
If you want even faster search across different formats, you can try ripgrep-all ( https://github.com/phiresky/ripgrep-all ). It can search across epub, docx, pdf, zip, mp4 etc. If you are handy with the tool, you can write custom adaptor to search across images using OCR with tesseract.
- Rga: Ripgrep, but also search in PDF, ebooks, office documents, zip, tar.gz etc.
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Show HN: Khoj – Chat Offline with Your Second Brain Using Llama 2
1. If you want better adoption especially among corporations, GPL-3 wont cut it. Maybe think of some business friendly licenses (MIT etc)
2. I understand the excitement about llm's. But how about making something more accessible. I use rip-grep-all (rga) along with fzf [1] that can search all files including pdfs in a specific folders. However, I would like a GUI tool to search across multiple folders, provide priority of results across folders and store and search histories where I can do a meta-search. This is sufficient for 95% of my usecases to search locally and I dont need LLM. If khoj can enable such search as default without LLM that will be a gamechanger for many people without a heavy compute machine or who dont want to use OpenAI.
[1] https://github.com/phiresky/ripgrep-all/wiki/fzf-Integration
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How to make file paths clickable?
I use `rga` to search through multiple PDF files for work. The tool returns a list of files and I would like to make those file paths clickable.
- Burgr – Books in Your Terminal
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Is there a way to searching multiple epub and pdf?
rga, aka ripgrep-all
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Internet Archive Scholar
I wanted to say 'au contrer' to your 'screenshots are not searchable' and link this[0] but I don't actually see images in the readme.. I swear it was there, maybe it's a buried extra flag..
- Recoll – Full-text search for your desktop
What are some alternatives?
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.
pdfgrep - PDFGrep is a GNU/Emacs module providing grep comparable facilities but for PDF files
org-brain - Org-mode wiki + concept-mapping
OCRmyPDF - OCRmyPDF adds an OCR text layer to scanned PDF files, allowing them to be searched
vscode-org-mode - Emacs Org Mode for Visual Studio Code
InvoiceNet - Deep neural network to extract intelligent information from invoice documents.
instant.nvim - collaborative editing in Neovim using built-in capabilities
notational-fzf-vim - Notational velocity for vim.
foam - A personal knowledge management and sharing system for VSCode
fd - A simple, fast and user-friendly alternative to 'find'
vim-dadbod-ui - Simple UI for https://github.com/tpope/vim-dadbod
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore