
Then paste the URL to your file in the Persistent Notes, and explain what it pertains to. You can use services like Google Drive, Dropbox, Hightail, etc, and publish your file as "public" and "unlisted". If you have attachments (for example, the script of your movie, or slides with the lecturer's notes), you can make them available online, and then add the link to the file to the Persistent Notes.Add the Title and the notes, and click Add Persistent Note.Go to Settings -> Persistent Notes, and click Add New Persistent Note:.In this case you can use Macros, as described below. When there are URLs to videos, PDFs, etc., different for each item, but that can be determined based on the filename of the media submitted.When using a 3rd-party integration that does not allow to send guidance.When the notes are the same for all the media files and it is cumbersome to add them manually each time.But there are several use cases where the Persistent Notes can be very useful: Our guidance for transcriber feature allows you to send notes and specific instructions to the transcribers.
Nvalt persistent note id archive#
You can change the title, the content, the tags - as long as the ID remains the same, the rest of your archive will not be affected.Closed Captioning your files with CaptionSync allows you to keep persistent notes for the transcribers. Linking notes by an arbitrary identifier (we suggest using date-based numbers for that purpose) helps keep links stable between notes. (Also, file name changes usually feel more important than tag changes to me.) When you get used to using tags like this, it's easier to change a note fundamentally in the future, like splitting its contents into multiple other notes, extracting each informational part as its own piece, then leave the original as an index, subsequently changing tags to better fit its new contents. Tags are loose connection between notes, and you can add or drop them from notes anytime without much effort. It makes your thinking more rigid, though. The name prefix doesn't have any advantage when it comes to full-text search. Using the search, you can drill down your recipes by searching for #recipe #low-carb #cake, for example, hopefully resulting in a low-carb cake recipe But now you can add other tags, too, like #baking, #low-carb, #cake, or what have you. This doesn't produce any benefit on its own, except maybe show more of the actual note title because you can remove the repeating "recipe" prefix. Then you can use the full-text search for "#recipe" to get to the set of notes that are recipes. I'd suggest you try to move the info "this is a recipe" from the file name into the note text as a tag: #recipe. This mimicks a rigid directory structure.

The note title structures you use are useful when you sort notes by name: then you have all recipes next to one another, for example. Let me tackle the note-related question first: How does The Archive handle images? Is there a tool that will allow viewing of 'The Archive' notes on iOS and include images? On iOS I am currently using Editorial and have used 1Writer in the past. How could i transfer this structure to Zettelkasten? I have very few links between notes or tags.ģ. I have set up nvalt using the note title as means of finding my way around my notes. What are the functional differences between NVAlt and The archive, on the surface they seem very similar appsĢ. Searching twitter for any updates i have found reference to 'The Archive' and have been intrigued by its use if Zettelkasten (not something i have heard about before). I have been a longtime NVAlt user and have been waiting a long time for its replacement (Bitwriter).
