zetteldesk.el
scimax
zetteldesk.el | scimax | |
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10 | 19 | |
111 | 997 | |
- | - | |
3.8 | 6.1 | |
12 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
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.
zetteldesk.el
- Zetteldesk.el has a new update after a few months! Check it out and please tell me your opinion on it.
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Emacs and knowledge management for scientists
For publishing stuff, Emacs has a very rich ecosystem. Org-export libraries are very powerful and allow you to export to virtually any format you desire. There is also org-publish for publishing your work, which works very well. However, when you have a bunch of org-roam nodes, it is not so easy to export all of them. I have personally created a tool for gathering a lot of your org-roam nodes in one file, your so-called "desktop" which can be used for revision of topics, writing manuscripts for articles or just straight up publishing your notes. You can find it here.
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Storing all nodes in a single file by default (?) - Linear visualisation
Hey, this is a bit of a self plug, but since I had the exact same problem with you, I am pretty sure I have exactly what you are looking for. Last year, I wrote zetteldesk.el and one of its core functionalities is exactly collecting a set of org-roam nodes and adding them to a buffer in a specific order so you can revise them as you like.
- zetteldesk.el is now on MELPA
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How do people search their org roam notes?
If your problems are just filtering and sorting your notes, then you should have no trouble. You can even insert them in a temporary buffer and view them all simultaneously. Albeit completely unrelated to daily notes, I recently wrote a package to solve this exact problem you describe, but instead of daily notes, I wanted to filter an arbitrary selection of notes. You can check it out here, the source might give you some inspiration for how to do what you want. Ripgrep is an excellent tool for searching your notes, but what you are asking for isn't really its use case I feel, you want more of a filter, not a search tool.
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Org-roam journey
Not sure what you mean on the first one. The second one's easiest solution is probably org-transclusion as what you're asking is to translude notes. But other packages with a similar concept of collecting your notes and adding them in a separate buffer are things such as delve or (shameless self plug) zetteldesk. I got no clue how to do the third one. I agree with you on that todos should work in more places, but I also don't know how to fix it. For the one with the calendar, I am pretty sure calfw has an extension that does that. I think calfw-org?
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I revamped the README of zetteldesk.el to make it easier to understand. What do you think of it?
Last week, I released my new emacs package zetteldesk.el and made a post here for showcasing it. The idea was rather well accepted but I got a lot of feedback, that the README was too dense in information and it was hard for a new user to try it. I have tried fixing this, by integrating gifs for demonstrations instead of the raw info (which I moved to the wiki for anyone wanting it), adding a set of default bindings in the form of a hydra and a small sample config to get you started.
- Show HN: Zetteldesk – Zettelkasten for Org-Roam
- zetteldesk.el: Built on top of org-roam. Easily revise various subjects or outline them
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New Package: Zetteldesk.el - A tool for revision and outlining built on top of Org-Roam
Link: https://github.com/Vidianos-Giannitsis/zetteldesk.el
scimax
- Scimax: An Emacs starterkit for scientists and engineers
- Jupyter and org-mode in scimax [video]
- Testing different Emacs distros easy way in Emacs 29/30
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Switched to Emacs a week ago, really thrilled so far. Looking for help on a few (somewhat advanced) questions.
Scimax should have out of box setup for bibliography, references etc. Anyway, regardless of what you use Emacs for, one step a time, would be my recommendation. Just start using it and solve problems as you experience them. It is better to add a single thing at a time when you need it, than to add 1000 different things because you think you will need them, and then not know what you have or what causes a problem.
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Embed excalidraw in Emacs?
https://github.com/wdavew/org-excalidraw is close. I discovered you can install Excalidraw from Chrome, and then it is like a local program. That is pretty amazing in itself. org-excalidraw indeed offers an org-link and way to make an excalidraw file from emacs, edited natively in an external excalidraw window. The svg preview does not work though if you use freehand lines in your image, and I was unable to install the npm packages on my Mac for some uninteresting reason related to DNS, but it did work in a node docker image. I find writing in excalidraw less advanced than in tools like Notability or PDFExpert. There are some artifacts in excalidraw from smoothing, or dangling pixels that I don't love. I forgot I had previously used https://github.com/lepisma/org-krita. Krita is a full drawing program, and this integrates into org-mode with image previews nicely. I am not that skilled in using it, and as a full drawing program, it has a learning curve. I wrote https://github.com/jkitchin/scimax/blob/master/scimax-inkscape.el to integrate inkscape into org-mode. It works, but I find inkscape slow to open, and I am not that skilled in using it.
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Emacs and knowledge management for scientists
Maybe give scimax a go?
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Emacs as org-mode interpreter - standalone, batch mode?
Anyway, if you want something geared toward scientific usage, there is Scimax by J. Kitchin. There may be some others, but I am not aware off.
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emacs distributions without evil?
Apart from the ones already mention, John Kitchin's science-focused Scimacs is also an option.
- Preferred Citation Management and Knowledge Management Tools?
- How it goes with me learning orgmode
What are some alternatives?
emacs-calfw - A calendar framework for Emacs
.emacs.d - Emacs backup of mine
delve - Delve into your org-roam zettelkasten
.spacemacs.d - My spacemacs config files. For spacemacs source, see https://github.com/capsulecorplab/spacemacs
Zero-to-Emacs-and-Org-roam - Step by step guide from zero to installing and setting up Emacs and Org-roam on Windows 10
org-roam - Rudimentary Roam replica with Org-mode
notdeft - NotDeft note manager for Emacs
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
citar - Emacs package to quickly find and act on bibliographic references, and edit org, markdown, and latex academic documents.
org-roam-bibtex - Org Roam integration with bibliography management software
dotemacs - My emacs configuration.