# telekasten.nvim A Neovim (lua) plugin for working with a markdown zettelkasten, based on telescope.nvim Find notes by name, daily and weekly notes by date, search within all notes, place and follow links to your notes or create new ones. Current daily and weekly notes are (optionally) created if not present when searching for dailies or weeklies. Following a link to a non-existing note can also create the missing note (optional). ## Search-based navigation Every navigation action, like following a link, is centered around a Telescope search: a Telescope search popup is opened, and in the case of following a link, the search-text is pre-filled with the target. So, instead of opening the linked note, you get a preview in Telescope and can decide if you actually want to go there. Since the search is often likely to show up more than one result, you can preview related notes immediately. ### The preview is a powerful feature Leaving the opening of the note to Telescope, you can decide with one keypress whether you want to open the note in a split or in the current window - or if you've seen enough. I find that pressing the enter key to confirm the search does not interrupt my flow, and I really enjoy being able to check the preview. I often get enough information from the it alone so I don't actually have to "visit" every note in terms of being able to edit it. ## Install and setup ### 0. Prerequisites #### Telescope Since this plugin uses [telescope.nvim](https://github.com/nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim), you need to install it first. [Neovim (v0.5.1)](https://github.com/neovim/neovim/releases/tag/v0.5.1) or the latest neovim nighly commit is required for `telescope.nvim` to work. #### Ripgrep For proper sort order of daily notes, the `rg` executable ([Ripgrep](https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep)) is required and needs to be installed so that nvim can find it. So make sure, it's in your path. If rg isn't found at `setup()` time, it will not be used. In that case, the sort order of daily and weekly notes are likely to be reversed. I do accept pull requests, though, for a lua implementation 😁! If you can't use `rg`, I recommend using `goto_today()` and `goto_thisweek()` instead of `find_daily_notes()` and `find_weekly_notes()`, as this pre-fills the search field, which makes the results list look a bit more sane. ### 1. Install the plugin Install with your plugin manager of choice. Mine is [Vundle](https://github.com/VundleVim/Vundle.vim). ```vimscript Plugin 'renerocksai/telekasten.nvim' ``` ### 2. Configure telekasten.nvim Somewhere in your vim config, put a snippet like this: ```lua lua << END local home = vim.fn.expand("~/zettelkasten") require('telekasten').setup({ home = home dailies = home .. '/' .. 'daily', weeklies = home .. '/' .. 'weekly', extension = ".md", -- following a link to a non-existing note will create it follow_creates_nonexisting = true, dailies_create_nonexisting = true, weeklies_create_nonexisting = true, -- template for new notes (new_note, follow_link) template_new_note = home .. '/' .. 'templates/new_note.md', -- template for newly created daily notes (goto_today) template_new_daily = home .. '/' .. 'templates/daily.md', -- template for newly created weekly notes (goto_thisweek) template_new_weekly= home .. '/' .. 'templates/weekly.md', }) END ``` ### 3. Configure your own colors Telekasten.nvim allows you to color your `[[links]]` by providing two syntax groups: - `tkLink` : the link title inside the brackets - `tkBrackets` : the brackets surrounding the link title - `tkHighlight` : ==highlighted== text (non-standard markdown) The last one, `tkHighlight`, has nothing to do with links but I added it anyway, since I like highlighting text when taking notes 😄. You can assign colors to the new syntax groups in your `init.vim`: ```vim " just blue and gray links hi tkLink ctermfg=Blue cterm=bold,underline hi tkBrackets ctermfg=gray " for gruvbox hi tkLink ctermfg=72 cterm=bold,underline hi tkBrackets ctermfg=gray " Highlight ==highlighted== text hi tkHighlight ctermbg=yellow ctermfg=darkred cterm=bold ``` ## Use it The plugin defines the following functions. - `new_note` : prompts for title and creates new note by template, then shows it in Telescope - `find_notes()` : find notes by file name (title), via Telescope - `find_daily_notes()` : find daily notes by date (file names, sorted, most recent first), via Telescope. If today's daily note is not present, it can be created optionally, honoring the configured template - `goto_today()` : pops up a Telescope window with today's daily note pre-selected. Today's note can optionally be created if not present, using the configured template - `find_weekly_notes()` : find weekly notes by week (file names, sorted, most recent first), via Telescope. If this week's weekly note is not present, it can be created optionally, honoring the configured template - `goto_thisweek()` : pops up a Telescope window with this week's weekly note pre-selected. This week's note can optionally be created if not present, using the configured template - `search_notes()`: live grep for word under cursor in all notes (search in notes), via Telescope - `insert_link()` : select a note by name, via Telescope, and place a `[[link]]` at the current cursor position - `follow_link()`: take text between brackets (linked note) and open a Telescope file finder with it: selects note to open (incl. preview) - with optional note creation for non-existing notes, honoring the configured template - `yank_notelink` : yank a link to the current note, ready to paste - `setup(opts)`: used for configuring paths, file extension, etc. To use one of the functions above, just run them with the `:lua ...` command. ```vimscript :lua require("telekasten").find_daily_notes() ``` ### Note templates The functions `goto_today`, `goto_thisweek`, `find_daily_notes`, `find_weekly_notes`, and `follow_link` can create non-existing notes. This allows you to 'go to today' without having to create today's note beforehand. When you just type `[[some link]]` and then call `follow_link`, the 'some link' note can be generated. The following table shows which command relies on what config option: | telekasten function | config option | creates what | | --- | --- | --- | | `goto_today` | `dailies_create_nonexisting` | today's daily note | | `find_daily_notes` | `dailies_create_nonexisting` | today's daily note | | `goto_thisweek` | `weeklies_create_nonexisting` | this week's weekly note | | `find_weekly_notes` | `weeklies_create_nonexisting` | this week's weekly note | | `follow_link` | `follow_creates_nonexisting` | new note | | `new_note` | always true | new note | If the associated option is `true`, non-existing notes will be created. #### Template files The options `template_new_note`, `template_new_daily`, and `template_new_weekly` are used to specify the paths to template text files that are used for creating new notes. Currently, the following substitutions will be made during new note creation: | specifier in template | expands to | example | | --- | --- | --- | | `{{title}}` | the title of the note | My new note | | `{{date}}` | date in iso format | 2021-11-21 | | `{{hdate}}` | date in long format | Sunday, November 21st, 2021 | | `{{week}}` | week of the year | 46 | | `{{year}}` | year | 2021 | As an example, this is my template for new notes: ```markdown --- title: {{title}} date: {{date}} --- ``` And I use this one for daily notes: ```markdown --- title: {{hdate}} --- ``` And finally, the weekly notes (that I don't use a lot): ```markdown --- title: {{year}}-W{{week}} date: {{hdate}} --- # Review Week {{week}} / {{year}} --- ## Highlights - **this**! - that! ## Monday link ## Tuesday link ## Wednesday link ## Thursday link ## Friday link ## Saturday link ## Sunday link ``` ## Bind it Usually, you would set up some key bindings, though: ```vim nnoremap zf :lua require('telekasten').find_notes() nnoremap zd :lua require('telekasten').find_daily_notes() nnoremap zg :lua require('telekasten').search_notes() nnoremap zz :lua require('telekasten').follow_link() nnoremap zt :lua require('telekasten').goto_today() nnoremap zw :lua require('telekasten').find_weekly_notes() nnoremap zn :lua require('telekasten').new_note() nnoremap zy :lua require('telekasten').yank_notelink() " we could define [[ in **insert mode** to call insert link " inoremap [[ :lua require('telekasten').insert_link() " alternatively: leader [ inoremap [ :lua require('telekasten').insert_link() " ----- the following are for syntax-coloring [[links]] and ==highlighted text== " ----- (see the section about coloring in README.md) " for gruvbox hi tkLink ctermfg=72 cterm=bold,underline hi tkBrackets ctermfg=gray " Highlight ==highlighted== text hi tkHighlight ctermbg=yellow ctermfg=darkred cterm=bold ``` ## The hardcoded stuff 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`)