A Neovim (lua) plugin for working with a text-based, markdown zettelkasten / wiki and mixing it with a journal, based on telescope.nvim.
- Find notes by name, #tag or by searching within note text
- Find daily, weekly notes by date
- Vaults: Support for multiple separate note collections
- Place and follow links to your notes or create new ones, with templates
- Find notes that link back to your notes
- Find other notes that link to the same note as the link under the cursor
- Support for links to headings or specific paragraphs within specific notes or globally
- Alias link names to keep everything clean and tidy
- Toggle [ ] todo status
- Paste images from clipboard
- Insert links to images
- Image previews, via
catimg
,viu
, or extension - Calendar support
Every navigation action, like following a link, is centered around a Telescope picker. You can then decide to actually open the note or just read the content from the picker itself. Thanks to Telescope actions you can also just insert a link to the note or yank a link instead of opening the note.
Telekasten requires Neovim v0.6.0 or higher. Besides that, its only mandatory dependency of is telescope.nvim, which acts as the backbone of this plugin.
Some features require external tools. For example, image pasting from the
clipboard require a compatible clipboard manager such as xclip
or
wl-clipboard
. Users are encouraged to read the requirements section of the
documentation for a complete list of optional dependencies (:h telekasten.requirements
).
Packer.nvim
use {
'renerocksai/telekasten.nvim',
requires = {'nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim'}
}
Lazy.nvim
{
'renerocksai/telekasten.nvim',
dependencies = {'nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim'}
},
Vim-plug
Plug 'nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim'
Plug 'renerocksai/telekasten.nvim'
Vundle
Plugin 'nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim'
Plugin 'renerocksai/telekasten.nvim'
In order to use Telekasten, you need to first require its setup function
somewhere in your init.lua
. Take this opportunity to indicate the path for
your notes directory. If you do not specify anything, the plugin will ask you to
create the defaults directories before first use.
require('telekasten').setup({
home = vim.fn.expand("~/zettelkasten"), -- Put the name of your notes directory here
})
NOTE: For Windows users, please indicate the path as
C:/Users/username/zettelkasten/
. See :h telekasten.windows
for more details
about the specificities for Windows.
Telekasten interacts very nicely with calendar-vim. Installing this plugin will allow you to create journal entries for the selected dates and highlight dates with attached entries.
Various plugins or external tools can be used as image previewers to help you pick the correct illustrations for your note.
Image pasting is supported by default on MacOS, it is not necessary to install any other tool.
While they do not interact directly with Telekasten, the following plugins greatly improve the note-taking experience.
- telescope-bibtex.nvim: manage citations using bibtex
- telescope-symbols.nvim: telescope picker for symbols and emojis
- peek.nvim or markdown-preview.nvim: markdown previewer
- vim-markdown-toc: generate a table of contents for your markdown documents
- synctodo: bash script to sync todos among Telekasten, Mac and iPhone reminders.
- telescope-all-recent: shows files you have recently opened.
The simplest way to use the plugin is to call directly the related Telekasten command:
:Telekasten <sub-command>
Advanced use
Each sub-command is implemented by a specific lua function. While high-level Telekasten commands can not accept arguments, you can also call directly the lua function with additional arguments. This is especially useful to craft some custom mappings.:lua require('telekasten').search_notes()
See the wiki for more details regarding advanced usage.
The following sub-commands are defined:
panel
: brings up the command palettefind_notes
: Find notes by title (filename)show_tags
: brings up the tag list. From there you can select a tag to search for tagged notes - or yank or insert the tagfind_daily_notes
: Find daily notes by title (date)search_notes
: Search (grep) in all notesinsert_link
: Insert a link to a notefollow_link
: Follow the link under the cursorgoto_today
: Open today's daily notenew_note
: Create a new note, prompts for titlegoto_thisweek
: Open this week's weekly notefind_weekly_notes
: Find weekly notes by title (calendar week)yank_notelink
: Yank a link to the currently open notenew_templated_note
: create a new note by template, prompts for title and templateshow_calendar
: Show the calendarpaste_img_and_link
: Paste an image from the clipboard into a file and inserts a link to ittoggle_todo
: Toggle- [ ]
todo status of a lineshow_backlinks
: Show all notes linking to the current onefind_friends
: Show all notes linking to the link under the cursorinsert_img_link
: Browse images / media files and insert a link to the selected onepreview_img
: preview image under the cursorbrowse_media
: Browse images / media filesrename_note
: Rename current note and update the links pointing to itswitch_vault
: switch the vault. Brings up a picker. See thevaults
config option for more.
Telekasten comes with a small helper command palette that let the user browse the different commands available. This feature is quite similar to the excellent which-key.nvim plugin, although limited to Telekasten.
You can call this panel using
:Telekasten panel
This can be especially useful if all your Telekasten mappings start with the same prefix. In that case, bind the command panel to the prefix only and it will pop-up when you hesitate to complete the mapping.
Telekasten.nvim allows you to color your [[links]]
and #tags
by providing
the following syntax groups:
tkLink
: the link title inside the bracketstkAliasedLink
: the concealed portion of[[concealed link|link alias]]
tkBrackets
: the brackets surrounding the link titletkHighlight
: ==highlighted== text (non-standard markdown)tkTag
: well, tags
An additional CalNavi
group is defined to tweak the appearance of the calendar
navigation button.
" Example
hi tkLink ctermfg=Blue cterm=bold,underline guifg=blue gui=bold,underline
hi tkBrackets ctermfg=gray guifg=gray
The real power of Telekasten lays in defining sensible mappings to make your
workflow even smoother. A good idea is to take advantage of the [command
palette][#command-palette] and start all your mappings with the same prefix
(<leader>z
, for Z
ettelkasten for instance).
-- Launch panel if nothing is typed after <leader>z
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>z", "<cmd>Telekasten panel<CR>")
-- Most used functions
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zf", "<cmd>Telekasten find_notes<CR>")
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zg", "<cmd>Telekasten search_notes<CR>")
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zd", "<cmd>Telekasten goto_today<CR>")
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zz", "<cmd>Telekasten follow_link<CR>")
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zn", "<cmd>Telekasten new_note<CR>")
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zc", "<cmd>Telekasten show_calendar<CR>")
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zb", "<cmd>Telekasten show_backlinks<CR>")
vim.keymap.set("n", "<leader>zI", "<cmd>Telekasten insert_img_link<CR>")
-- Call insert link automatically when we start typing a link
vim.keymap.set("i", "[[", "<cmd>Telekasten insert_link<CR>")
Each Telekasten command is bound to a specific lua function. As lua functions can accept arguments, it is possible to craft special mappings to tailor the execution of a function to your specific need.
See the wiki for more details regarding advanced key mappings.
Telekasten allows the user to have completely separated note collections and
switch between them easily. Simply add data to the vaults
table in the
configuration and configure each vault as you wish.
The following links are supported:
# Note links
- [[A cool title]] ................. links to the note named 'A cool title'
- [[A cool title#Heading 27]] ...... links to the heading 'Heading 27' within the note
named 'A cool title'
- [[A cool title#^xxxxxxxx]] ....... links to the paragraph with id ^xxxxxxxx within the note
named 'A cool title'
- [[201705061300|A cool title]] ..... links to the note named `201705061300` but shows the link as
`A cool title` if `conceallevel=2`
- [[#Heading 27]] .................. links to the heading 'Heading 27' within all notes
- [[#^xxxxxxxx]] ................... links to the paragraph with id ^xxxxxxxx within all notes
## Optionally, notes can live in specific sub-directories
- [[some/subdirectory/A cool title]]
- [[some/subdirectory/A cool title#Heading 27]]
- [[some/subdirectory/A cool title#^xxxxxxxx]]
# Media links
Use these for images, PDF files, videos. If telescope-media-files is installed,
these can be previewed.
- ![optional title](path/to/file) ... links to the file `path/to/file`
See the documentation for more details regarding the different types of links
(:h telekasten.link_notation
).
Telekasten supports the following tag notations:
#tag
@tag
:tag:
yaml-bare
: bare tags in a tag collection in the yaml metadata:
See the documentation for more details regarding the tag syntax (:h telekasten.tag_notation
).
To streamline your workflow, it is possible to create various note templates and call them upon note creation. These templates will substitute various terms (date, times, file names, UUID, etc).
A simple template can be:
---
uuid: {{uuid}}
date: {{date}}
---
# {{shorttitle}}
A complete list of substitutions can be found in the documentation (:h telekasten.template_files
).
When you are prompted with a telescope picker to select a note or media file, the following mappings apply:
- CTRL + i : inserts a link to the selected note / image
- the option
insert_after_inserting
defines if insert mode will be entered after the link is pasted into your current buffer
- the option
- CTRL + y : yanks a link to the selected note / image,
ready for pasting
- the option
close_after_yanking
defines whether the telescope window should be closed when the link has been yanked
- the option
- RETURN / ENTER : usually opens the selected note or performs the
action defined by the called function
- e.g.
insert_img_link()
's action is to insert a link to the selected image.
- e.g.
When invoking show_calendar()
, a calendar showing the previous, current, and
next month is shown at the right side of vim.
- days that have a daily note associated with them are marked with a + sign and a different color
- pressing enter on a day will open up a telescope finder with the associated daily note selected and previewed. The daily note will be created if it doesn't exist. If you choose to not open the note, you will return to the calender so you can preview other notes.
If you want to see a big calendar showing the current month that fills your entire window, you can issue the following command in vim:
:CalendarT
Some (minor) stuff are currently still hard-coded. We will eventually change this to allow more flexibility at one point.
Currently, the following things are hardcoded:
- the file naming format for daily note files:
YYYY-MM-DD.ext
(e.g.2021-11-21.md
) - the file naming format for weekly note files:
YYYY-Www.ext
(e.g.2021-W46.md
) - the file naming format for pasted images:
pasted_img_YYYYMMDDhhmmss.png
(e.g.pasted_img_20211126041108.png
)
The Telekasten logo is based on the neovim logo attributed to Jason Long, neovim, CC-BY-3.0.