Adds command Show Graph
that displays a graph of local links between Markdown files in the current working directory.
Gives better insights into structure of your files if you are writinga wiki, a Zettelkasten style notebook or documentation.
Recommended workflow is either keeping the graph open and using it as an alternative to the explorer sidebar or checking the it from time to time.
The graph refreshes automatically every time you:
- Update a Markdown title of the file.
- Change links to other files.
- Create a new file and add give it a title.
- Remove a file.
When active file in the editor changes and it matches one of the files in the graph – it will be highlighted.
- Title is always the first Markdown heading of depth 1, i.e.
# Title
. - Files which do not have a title do not appear in the graph.
- Files can link to other files using local Markdown links or ID-based links.
- The graph is not directed. It doesn't show which file has the link and which one is linked.
- Directory structure is not relevant for the graph. All that matters is the mutual links between files.
# Title
Link can be present in [text](first.md) or on a special list.
## Linked
- [Second](./2.md)
Named reference can also be used, like this: [Reference].
[reference]: ref.md
This extension contributes the following settings:
Controls in which column should the graph appear. Refer to Column values. Defaults to beside
.
Controls in which column should clicked files open. Refer to Column values. Defaults to one
.
active
– in the currently focused column.beside
– other than the current.one
(default),two
,three
,four
,five
,six
,seven
,eight
,nine
– respective editor columns.
A regular expression used to find the file ID for use in wiki-style links.
Plans for development are roughly summarized in the Roadmap.
Refer to the CHANGELOG.md file.
You are very welcome to open an issue or a pull request with changes.
If it is your first time with vscode extension, make sure to checkout Official Guides.