Spyke

I've used many "notes" apps for keeping thoughts, projects, lists in the past. Some have been simple others complex, yet they all left me wanting something more. Diving into #foss has brought me to

I've used many "notes" apps for keeping thoughts, projects, lists in the past. Some have been simple others complex, yet they all left me wanting something more. Diving into #foss has brought me to @logseq and it fills my needs. Love the fact it's built aound a daily note.
#debigtech #degoogle

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INeedManareply
piefed.zip

Obsidian organizes notes in dirs, isn't fully data-driven. So when you have adventures/crazy_ride_3.md, adventures can't have a body with resume of all the adventures

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It is somewhat achievable now with page properties and bases in Obsidian. But yes, different paradigm. Makes me look up the file and folder structure way more often than LogSeq, in which I do, in fact, maintain some folder hierarchy of notes, but it’s primarily for other needs

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Lodespawnreply
aussie.zone

What do you mean resume? Like a list of all the pages in the folder? Does logseq automatically setup these links in an adventures.md or do you need to type them all out in some kind of extended markdown? Does it automatically append the links back to the summary page?

1

By resume I meant a writeup ( like a table where I can organise adventures into plot stages for example). Or embeds of children files

But yes, in the view of adventures.md there will also be an automated list of references containing the children

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I've used many "notes" apps for keeping thoughts, projects, lists in the past. Some have been simple others complex, yet they all left me wanting something more. Diving into #foss has brought me to | Spyke