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