Replies: 6 comments 16 replies
-
Thank you, Christopher! I have fixed that now. Let us know when you find other problems. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Thanks for your reply. I have tried to create a new database with a new directory for import. Here is the directory structure I created, hoping to replicate your example: |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
(2/) In the So, once you have ZettelGeist 1.1.1 installed, the
|
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
Upgraded to 1.1.1 thanks. No warning now. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
@cjpoor Glad to see you are up and running! Please do keep us informed! |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
@cjpoor, @icornelius has done a great job of explaining the Our companion effort is to be able to drive writing from a collection of Zetteln (the plural for Zettels) and unite any citations with the full bibliography. You can see how this works in our zg-tutorial, where we show how to create documents from a ZettelGeist database. To your other question about whether other fields can be added, the short answer is "yes". However, as all three of us have lived with using a subset of the various Zettel fields, we're increasingly of the belief that less is more. That said, we don't plan to eliminate any fields, since some users may find them useful for their workflow. In an earlier incarnation of this work, I was looking at how to support a completely ad hoc note format. It would be driven entirely by user-defined fields. There would be standard fields as in "today's" Zettel format but you could also include any additional data you wish. I think it would be awesome but would also result in people spending too much time thinking about how to "structure" Zetteln. We prefer the notion of "one note per idea" and then performing queries to bring ideas together. As for YAML, this too, was driven primarily by ease-of-use. Now that we support arbitrary Markdown as "the rest of the Zettel", we probably could allow just about any format, e.g. JSON or XML, as the frontmatter. After working with other humanists such as @dbdennis and @icornelius, I'm convinced that YAML is a great choice for writers/scholars, who may well understand more complex formats but would prefer to spend their time on writing instead of programming their notes. Now that I think of it, I'd rather spend most of my time writing, too. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
At the end of "Installing the tools" the link to "Getting Started" is broken.
It leads to https://github.com/gs but should lead to
https://github.com/ZettelGeist/zettelgeist/wiki/Getting-Started
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions