mirror of
https://github.com/mickael-menu/zk
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84 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
84 lines
3.2 KiB
Markdown
# Getting started with `zk`
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A short introduction showing how to use `zk`.
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## Create a new notebook
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Create a [notebook](notebook.md) to host your notes. You are free to organize your notebook as you want, adding subdirectories if needed.
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```sh
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$ zk init my-notes
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Initialized a notebook in my-notes
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$ cd my-notes
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```
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## Create your first notes
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Now you are ready to write your very first note. Pick a subject, [create a new note](note-creation.md) and write on!
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```sh
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$ zk new --title "An interesting concept"
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```
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You can customize your experience using [custom templates](template.md) to generate many kind of notes.
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<div align="center"><img alt="Create a note" width="85%" src="assets/media/new1.svg"/></div>
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If you are not sure whether a note already exists for a particular subject, the "search or create" mode might be more appropriate than `zk new`. It is inspired by [Notational Velocity](https://notational.net/) and enables searching for an existing note or creating a new one in a single action.
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From `zk`'s interactive edit screen, press `Ctrl-E` to create a new note using the current search query as title.
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<div align="center"><img alt="Create a note" width="85%" src="assets/media/new2.svg"/></div>
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## List existing notes
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After some time, hopefully you will have enough notes to be lost in it. Use `zk`'s powerful [filtering capabilities](note-filtering.md) to find the notes you need.
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```sh
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$ zk list --tag "recipe" --match "pizza -pineapple"
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```
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<div align="center"><img alt="Format the list output" width="85%" src="assets/media/list.svg"/></div>
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Sort the results however you need with `--sort`.
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<div align="center"><img alt="Format the list output" width="85%" src="assets/media/list-sort.svg"/></div>
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`--format` and `--delimiter` offer some versatile formatting options to customize the output.
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<div align="center"><img alt="Format the list output" width="85%" src="assets/media/list-format.svg"/></div>
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`zk` is aware of the links you set between your notes. You can use the linking options to find the backlinks or outbound links of a note. It even supports listing indirect links thanks to `--recursive`.
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<div align="center"><img alt="Format the list output" width="85%" src="assets/media/list-link.svg"/></div>
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`zk` supports an interactive mode powered by [`fzf`](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf) to further filter notes manually.
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<div align="center"><img alt="Format the list output" width="85%" src="assets/media/list-interactive.svg"/></div>
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## Edit existing notes
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To edit notes with your default editor, use `zk edit`. It supports the same [filtering options](note-filtering.md) as `zk list`.
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```sh
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$ zk edit --interactive --match "recipe pizza -pineapple"
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# or with short flags
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$ zk edit -i -m "recipe pizza -pineapple"
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```
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<div align="center"><img alt="Format the list output" width="85%" src="assets/media/edit.svg"/></div>
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## Edit the configuration file
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To customize your experience with `zk`, you may want to edit the [user configuration file](config.md).
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```sh
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$ vim .zk/config.toml
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```
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Declaring your own [aliases](config-alias.md) is a great way to make your experience with `zk` easier and more familiar.
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<div align="center"><img alt="Format the list output" width="85%" src="assets/media/alias.svg"/></div>
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