Hey guys, I think I get the basic idea, but I have a few questions…
-
How do I just open up a note to check it out? I can see just opening the file regularly, but having each file start with a long sting of numbers leads me to think there’s some nicer, easier way.
-
How do I go about having multiple “networks” one for work and one for home, etc. Do I just use folders?
Thanks guys!
- You can use
org-roam-node-find
which (maybe depending on your default completion framework, I use doom emacs btw. so some things are preset) let you type substrings of the actual title of the node to find it. - This is a bit complicated, because there is no built-in way for having distinct buckets in Org-roam. But you can set directory-local variables in
.dir-locals.el
to achieve this.
For example, put this inside the file
/home/username/work/.dir-locals.el
:;; -*- mode: emacs-lisp; -*- ((nil . ((org-roam-directory . "/home/username/work") (org-roam-db-location . "/home/username/work/org-roam.db"))))
Whenever Emacs opens a file inside the
work
directory, it will load and apply any variables in this file. Therefore you first must open a file inside the folder to access this files; open a file outside the directory to access the default ones.Thanks for the help! Would I be better off just having all work and other stuff together then? Or is it worth the hassle to use a work dir?
Check this out: https://codeberg.org/tekakutli/neuralnomicon
I came across this guy who came up with a way to share some of his org-roam notes, and the strategy he uses could apply to your work situation. He keeps everything in one org-roam database, but for the notes he’s sharing with the general public:
- He stores them in a separate directory
neuralnomicon/nodes
. - He tags them as
neuralnomicon
.
- He stores them in a separate directory
- You can use