Sometimes I like to use nvim for PKM stuff (sometimes in parallel with Logseq because I think that the vim plugin does what it can, but there’s a lot of features that I just do quicker on nvim. So, I created this alias to open in the terminal the latest .md file in my PKM folder (both pages and journals) pkmu.

I also have another ones like pkm, that opens in nvim today’s journal. and pkmj and pkmp open the directory for PKM journals and pages, if I want to do anything there (maybe a fzf, rename, bat, rm…).

alias pkm='nvim "$HOME/Documentos/PKM/logseq/journals/$(date +%Y_%m_%d).md"'
alias pkmj='cd $HOME/Documentos/PKM/logseq/journals/'
alias pkmp='cd $HOME/Documentos/PKM/logseq/pages/'
alias pkmu='nvim "$(find $HOME/Documentos/PKM/logseq/ -type f -name '\''*.md'\'' -printf '\''%T@ %p\n'\'' | sort -n | tail -1 | cut -d'\'' '\'' -f2-)"'

I just wanted to share this with you, just in case it helps, or gives you any cool idea.

  • Moshpirit@lemmy.worldOP
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    4 months ago

    I’m glad you find it interesting! BTW, what do you mean by static site? A defined directory for all your md files?

    • JackbyDev@programming.dev
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      4 months ago

      Static site as in HTML files. Basically I’ve been trying to hack together something like this https://obsidian.md/publish (minus the hosting). It has always felt like a very common use case to just have a directory of markdown files be rendered into HTML files while also being able to link to others but shockingly it’s quite difficult to set up. There are a lot of tools that do nearly what I am trying to do but not quite.