<svgid="screen"width="640"height="425"x="20"y="40"viewBox="0 0 640 425"preserveAspectRatio="xMidYMin slice"><rectclass="background"height="100%"width="100%"x="0"y="0"/><defs><gid="g1"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground"></text></g><gid="g2"><textx="0"textLength="16"class="foreground">$ </text><textx="16"textLength="8"class="background"></text><textx="24"textLength="616"class="foreground"></text></g><gid="g3"><textx="0"textLength="112"class="foreground">$ zk list -qn3</text><textx="112"textLength="8"class="background"></text><textx="120"textLength="520"class="foreground"></text></g><gid="g4"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground">$ zk list -qn3 </text></g><gid="g5"><textx="0"textLength="184"font-weight="bold"class="color11">A future-proof notebook</text><textx="184"textLength="8"class="foreground"></text><textx="192"textLength="120"text-decoration="underline"class="color6">future-proof.md</text><textx="312"textLength="104"class="foreground"> (6 days ago)</text></g><gid="g6"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground">‣ `zk` is designed to be future-proof and rely on simple plain text formats su</text></g><gid="g7"><textx="0"textLength="120"class="foreground">ch as Markdown.</text></g><gid="g8"><textx="0"textLength="200"font-weight="bold"class="color11">Automating frequent tasks</text><textx="200"textLength="8"class="foreground"></text><textx="208"textLength="104"text-decoration="underline"class="color6">automation.md</text><textx="312"textLength="112"class="foreground"> (2 weeks ago)</text></g><gid="g9"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground">‣ `zk` was designed with automation in mind and strive to be [a good Unix citi</text></g><gid="g10"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground">zen](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_philosophy). As such, it offers a number</text></g><gid="g11"><textx="0"textLength="336"class="foreground"> of ways to interface with other programs:</text></g><gid="g12"><textx="0"textLength="216"font-weight="bold"class="color11">Call zk from other programs</text><textx="216"textLength="8"class="foreground"></text><textx="224"textLength="128"text-decoration="underline"class="color6">external-call.md</text><textx="352"textLength="112"class="foreground"> (2 weeks ago)</text></g><gid="g13"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground">‣ Calling `zk` from other programs can be useful in a number of situations, su</text></g><gid="g14"><textx="0"textLength="48"class="foreground">ch as:</text></g><gid="g15"><textx="0"textLength="224"class="foreground">$ zk list -qn3 --format full</text><textx="224"textLength="8"class="background"></text><textx="232"textLength="408"class="foreground"></text></g><gid="g16"><textx="0"textLength="184"font-weight="bold"class="color11">A future-proof notebook</text><textx="184"textLength="8"class="foreground"></text><textx="192"textLength="120"text-decoration="underline"class="color6">future-proof.md</text></g><gid="g17"><textx="0"textLength="152"class="foreground">Created: 02/26/2021</text></g><gid="g18"><textx="0"textLength="160"class="foreground">Modified: 02/26/2021</text></g><gid="g19"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground"> `zk` is designed to be future-proof and rely on simple plain text formats such</text></g><gid="g20"><textx="0"textLength="104"class="foreground"> as Markdown.</text></g><gid="g21"><textx="0"textLength="16"class="foreground"></text></g><gid="g22"><textx="0"textLength="640"class="foreground"> The shape of your [notebook](notebook.md) is entirely up to you, making `zk` f</text></g><gid="g23"><textx="0"t