nb
is a command line and local web
note‑taking, bookmarking, archiving,
and knowledge base application
with:
- plain text data storage,
- encryption,
- filtering, pinning, #tagging, and search,
- Git-backed versioning and syncing,
- Pandoc-backed conversion,
- [[wiki-style linking]],
- terminal and GUI web browsing,
- inline images,
- todos with tasks,
- global and local notebooks,
- organization with folders,
- customizable color themes,
- extensibility through plugins,
and more, in a single portable script.
nb
creates notes in text-based formats like
Markdown,
Org,
LaTeX,
and AsciiDoc,
can work with files in any format,
can import and export notes to many document formats,
and can create private, password-protected encrypted notes and bookmarks.
With nb
, you can write notes using
Vim,
Emacs,
VS Code,
Sublime Text,
and any other text editor you like,
as well as terminal and GUI web browsers.
nb
works in any standard Linux / Unix environment,
including macOS and Windows via WSL, MSYS, and Cygwin.
Optional dependencies can be installed to enhance functionality,
but nb
works great without them.
nb
is also a powerful bookmarking system featuring:
- locally-served, text-centric, distraction-free bookmark browsing in terminal and GUI web browsers,
- local full-text search of cached page content with regular expression support,
- convenient filtering and listing,
- Internet Archive Wayback Machine snapshot lookup for broken links,
- tagging, pinning, linking, and full integration with other
nb
features.
Page information is downloaded, cleaned up, structured, and saved into normal Markdown documents made for humans, so bookmarks are easy to view and edit just like any other note.
nb
uses Git in the background to
automatically record changes and sync notebooks with remote repositories.
nb
can also be configured to
sync notebooks using a general purpose syncing utility like Dropbox
so notes can be edited in other apps on any device.
nb
is designed to be portable, future-focused, and vendor independent,
providing a full-featured and intuitive experience within
a highly composable multimodal user-centric text interface.
The entire program is contained within
a single well-tested shell script
that can be
installed, copied, or curl
ed almost anywhere and just work,
using a strategy inspired by
progressive enhancement
for various experience improvements in more capable environments.
nb
works great whether you have one notebook with just a few notes
or dozens of notebooks containing thousands of notes, bookmarks, and other items.
nb
makes it easy to incorporate other tools, writing apps, and workflows.
nb
can be used a little, a lot, once in a while, or for just a subset of features.
nb
is flexible.
- Bash
nb
works perfectly with Zsh, fish, and any other shell set as your primary login shell, the system just needs to have Bash available on it.
- Git
- A text editor with command line support, such as:
nb
leverages standard command line tools
and works in standard Linux / Unix environments.
nb
also checks the environment for some additional optional tools and
uses them to enhance the experience whenever they are available.
Recommended:
Also supported for various enhancements:
Ack,
afplay
,
asciidoctor
,
The Silver Searcher (ag
),
catimg
,
Chafa,
Chromium / Chrome,
eza
,
ffplay
,
ImageMagick,
glow
,
GnuPG,
highlight
,
imgcat
,
joshuto
,
kitty's icat
kitten,
lsd
,
Links,
Lynx,
mdcat
,
mdless
,
mdv
,
Midnight Commander (mc
),
mpg123
,
MPlayer,
ncat
,
netcat
,
note-link-janitor
(via plugin),
pdftotext
,
Pygments,
Ranger,
readability-cli,
rga
/ ripgrep-all,
sc-im
,
socat
,
termvisage
,
termpdf.py
,
Tidy-Viewer (tv
),
timg
,
vifm,
viu
,
VisiData
brew install xwmx/taps/nb
Installing nb
with Homebrew also installs
the recommended dependencies above
and completion scripts for Bash, Zsh, and Fish.
Install the latest development version from the repository with:
brew install xwmx/taps/nb --head
nb
is also available in
homebrew-core.
Installing it together with the bash
formula is recommended:
brew install nb bash
npm install -g nb.sh
After npm
installation completes, run
sudo "$(which nb)" completions install
to install Bash and Zsh completion scripts (recommended).
On Ubuntu and WSL, you can
run sudo "$(which nb)" env install
to install the optional dependencies.
When nb
is installed on Windows,
socat
(MSYS,
Cygwin) is recommended.
nb
is also available under its original package name,
notes.sh,
which comes with an extra notes
executable wrapping nb
.
To install as an administrator, copy and paste one of the following multi-line commands:
# install using wget
sudo wget https://raw.github.com/xwmx/nb/master/nb -O /usr/local/bin/nb &&
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/nb &&
sudo nb completions install
# install using curl
sudo curl -L https://raw.github.com/xwmx/nb/master/nb -o /usr/local/bin/nb &&
sudo chmod +x /usr/local/bin/nb &&
sudo nb completions install
On Ubuntu and WSL, you can
run sudo nb env install
to install the optional dependencies.
To install with just user permissions, simply
add the nb
script to your $PATH
.
If you already have a ~/bin
directory, for example, you can
use one of the following commands:
# download with wget
wget https://raw.github.com/xwmx/nb/master/nb -O ~/bin/nb && chmod +x ~/bin/nb
# download with curl
curl -L https://raw.github.com/xwmx/nb/master/nb -o ~/bin/nb && chmod +x ~/bin/nb
Installing with just user permissions doesn't include
the optional dependencies or completions,
but nb
core functionality works without them.
If you have sudo
access and want
to install the completion scripts and dependencies, run the following command:
sudo nb env install
To install with Make, clone this repository, navigate to the clone's root directory, and run:
sudo make install
This will also install the completion scripts on all systems and the recommended dependencies on Ubuntu and WSL.
To install with bpkg:
bpkg install xwmx/nb
To install with basher:
basher install xwmx/nb
Bash, Fish, and Zsh tab completion should be enabled
when nb
is installed using the methods above,
assuming you have the appropriate system permissions or installed with sudo
.
If completion isn't working after installing nb
, see the
completion installation instructions.
When nb
is installed using a package manager like npm or Homebrew,
use the package manager's upgrade functionality to update nb
to
the latest version.
When installed via other methods,
nb
can be updated to the latest version using
the nb update
subcommand.
📝
Notes ·
Adding ·
Listing ·
Editing ·
Viewing ·
Deleting ·
🔖
Bookmarks ·
✅
Todos ·
✔️
Tasks ·
🏷
Tagging ·
🔗
Linking ·
🌍
Browsing ·
🌄
Images ·
🗂
Zettelkasten ·
📂
Folders ·
📌
Pinning ·
🔍
Search ·
↔
Moving & Renaming ·
🗒
History ·
📚
Notebooks ·
🔄
Git Sync ·
↕️
Import / Export ·
⚙️
set
&settings
·
🎨
Color Themes ·
🔌
Plugins ·
:/
Selectors ·
01
Metadata ·
❯
Shell ·
Shortcuts ·
?
Help ·
$
Variables ·
Specifications ·
Tests
To get started, simply run:
nb
nb
sets up your initial home
notebook the first time it runs.
By default, notebooks and notes are global (at ~/.nb
),
so they are always available to nb
regardless of the current working directory.
nb
also supports local notebooks.
↑ ·
nb add
,
nb browse add
Use nb add
(shortcuts: nb a
, nb +
)
to create new notes:
# create a new note in your text editor
nb add
# create a new note with the filename "example.md"
nb add example.md
# create a new note containing "This is a note."
nb add "This is a note."
# create a new note with piped content
echo "Note content." | nb add
# create a new password-protected, encrypted note titled "Secret Document"
nb add --title "Secret Document" --encrypt
# create a new note in the notebook named "example"
nb example:add "This is a note."
# create a new note in the folder named "sample"
nb add sample/
nb add
with no arguments or input will open the new, blank note
in your environment's preferred text editor.
You can change your editor using
the $EDITOR
environment variable
or nb set editor
.
nb
files are Markdown
files by default. The default file type can be changed to
whatever you like
using nb set default_extension
.
nb add
has intelligent argument parsing
and behaves differently depending on the types of arguments it receives.
When a filename with extension is specified,
a new note with that filename is opened in the editor:
nb add example.md
When a string is specified, a new note is immediately created with that string as the content and without opening the editor:
❯ nb add "This is a note."
Added: [1] 20200101000000.md
nb add <string>
is useful for quickly jotting down notes directly
via the command line. Quoting content is optional, but recommended.
When no filename is specified, nb add
uses the current datetime as
the filename.
nb add
can also receive piped content, which behaves the same as
nb add <string>
:
# create a new note containing "Note content."
❯ echo "Note content." | nb add
Added: [6] 20200101000100.md
# create a new note containing the clipboard contents on macOS
❯ pbpaste | nb add
Added: [7] 20200101000200.md
# create a new note containing the clipboard contents using xclip
❯ xclip -o | nb add
Added: [8] 20200101000300.md
Content can be passed with the --content <content>
option,
which also creates a new note without opening the editor:
nb add --content "Note content."
When content is piped,
specified with --content <content>
,
or passed as a string argument,
use the --edit
flag to open the file in the editor
before the change is committed.
The title, filename, and content can also be specified with long and short options:
❯ nb add --filename "example.md" -t "Example Title" -c "Example content."
Added: [9] example.md "Example Title"
The -t <title>
/ --title <title>
option also
sets the filename to the title,
lowercased with spaces and non-filename characters replaced with underscores:
❯ nb add --title "Example Title" "Example content."
Added: [10] example_title.md "Example Title"
Tags can be added with the --tags <tag1>,<tag2>...
option, which
takes a comma separated list of tags,
converts them to #hashtags,
and inserts them between the title and content:
❯ nb add "Example content." --title "Tagged Example" --tags tag1,tag2
Added: [11] tagged_example.md "Tagged Example"
❯ nb show 11 --print
# Tagged Example
#tag1 #tag2
Example content.
Search for tagged items with
nb search
/ nb q
:
# search for items tagged with "#tag1"
nb search --tag tag1
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2", short options
nb q -t tag1 -t tag2
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" OR "#tag2", arguments
nb q \#tag1 --or \#tag2
Files can be created with any file type by specifying the extension either
in the filename (example.md
),
the extension by itself (.md
),
or via the --type <type>
option (--type md
):
# open a new Org file in the editor
nb add example.org
# open a new reStructuredText file in the editor
nb add --type rst
# open a new JavaScript file in the editor
nb add .js
Combining a type argument with piped clipboard content provides
a very convenient way to save code snippets using a clipboard utility such as
pbpaste
,
xclip
,
or pb
:
# save the clipboard contents as a JavaScript file in the current notebook
pb | nb add .js
# save the clipboard contents as a Rust file in the "rust" notebook
# using the shortcut alias `nb a`
pb | nb a rust: .rs
# save the clipboard contents as a Haskell file named "example.hs" in the
# "snippets" notebook using the shortcut alias `nb +`
pb | nb + snippets: example.hs
Use nb show
and nb browse
to view code snippets
with automatic syntax highlighting and
use nb edit
to open in your editor.
The clip
plugin can also be used to
create notes from clipboard content.
Piping,
--title <title>
,
--tags <tag-list>
,
--content <content>
,
and content passed in an argument
can be combined as needed
to create notes with content from multiple input methods and sources
using a single command:
❯ pb | nb add "Argument content." \
--title "Sample Title" \
--tags tag1,tag2 \
--content "Option content."
Added: [12] sample_title.md "Sample Title"
❯ nb show 12 --print
# Sample Title
#tag1 #tag2
Argument content.
Option content.
Clipboard content.
For a full list of options available for nb add
, run
nb help add
.
Password-protected notes and bookmarks are
created with the -e
/ --encrypt
flag and
encrypted with AES-256 using OpenSSL by default.
GPG is also supported and can be configured with
nb set encryption_tool
.
Each protected note and bookmark is
encrypted individually with its own password.
When an encrypted item is viewed, edited, or opened,
nb
will simply prompt for the item's password before proceeding.
After an item is edited,
nb
automatically re-encrypts it and saves the new version.
Encrypted notes can be decrypted
using the OpenSSL and GPG command line tools directly, so
you aren't dependent on nb
to decrypt your files.
nb
includes shortcuts for many commands, including
nb a
and nb +
for nb add
:
# create a new note in your text editor
nb a
# create a new note with the filename "example.md"
nb a example.md
# create a new note containing "This is a note."
nb + "This is a note."
# create a new note containing the clipboard contents with xclip
xclip -o | nb +
# create a new note in the notebook named "example"
nb example:a
nb add
can also be invoked with
nb create
and nb new
for convenience:
# create a new note containing "Example note content."
nb new "Example note content."
# create a new note with the title "Example Note Title"
nb create --title "Example Note Title"
Items can also be added within terminal and GUI web browsers using
nb browse add
/ nb b a
:
❯ nb browse add
❯nb · home : +
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[add]
Pass a filename, relative path, and / or notebook name to create a new note at that location:
# open the add form in the browser to create the file "file.md" in the folder "example"
nb browse add "example/file.md"
nb browse add
includes options for quickly
pre-populating new notes with content:
❯ nb browse add --title "Example Title" --content "Example content." --tags tag1,tag2
❯nb · home : +
[# Example Title ]
[ ]
[#tag1 #tag2 ]
[ ]
[Example content. ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[add]
nb browse add
can also be opened with
nb add --browse
/ nb a -b
.
For more information, see Browsing.
To list notes and notebooks, run nb ls
(shortcut alias: nb
):
Notebooks are listed above the line,
with the current notebook highlighted and/or underlined,
depending on terminal capabilities.
nb ls
also includes a footer with example commands for easy reference.
The notebook header and command footer can be configured or hidden with
nb set header
and
nb set footer
.
❯ nb ls
home
----
[3] example.md · "Example content."
[2] sample.md · "Sample content."
[1] demo.md · "- Demo list item one."
Notes from the current notebook are listed in the order they were last modified. By default, each note is listed with its id, filename, and an excerpt from the first line of the note. When a note has a title, the title is displayed instead of the filename and first line.
Markdown titles can be defined within a note using
either Markdown h1
style
or YAML front matter:
# Example Title
Sample Title
============
---
title: Demo Title
---
Org,
LaTeX,
and AsciiDoc
titles are recognized in .org
,.latex
, and .asciidoc
/ .adoc
files:
#+title: Example Org Title
\title{Example LaTeX Title}
= Example AsciiDoc Title
Once defined, titles are displayed in place of the filename and first line
in the output of nb ls
:
❯ nb ls
home
----
[3] Example Title
[2] Sample Title
[1] Demo Title
Pass an id, filename, or title to view the listing for that note:
❯ nb ls Sample\ Title
[2] Sample Title
❯ nb ls 3
[3] Example Title
If there is no exact match, nb
will list items with
titles and filenames that fuzzy match the query:
❯ nb ls exa
[3] Example Title
❯ nb ls ample
[3] Example Title
[2] Sample Title
Multiple words act like an OR
filter, listing any
titles or filenames that match any of the words:
❯ nb ls example demo
[3] Example Title
[1] Demo Title
When multiple words are quoted, filter titles and filenames for that phrase:
❯ nb ls "example title"
[3] Example Title
For full text search, see Search.
To view excerpts of notes, use the --excerpt
or -e
option,
which optionally accepts a length:
❯ nb ls 3 --excerpt
[3] Example Title
-----------------
# Example Title
This is an example excerpt.
❯ nb ls 3 -e 8
[3] Example Title
-----------------
# Example Title
This is an example excerpt.
More example content:
- one
- two
Several classes of file types are represented with emoji
indicators to make them easily identifiable in lists.
For example, bookmarks and encrypted notes are listed with 🔖
and 🔒
:
❯ nb ls
home
----
[4] Example Note
[3] 🔒 encrypted-note.md.enc
[2] 🔖 Example Bookmark (example.com)
[1] 🔖 🔒 encrypted.bookmark.md.enc
File types include:
🔉 Audio
📖 Book
🔖 Bookmark
🔒 Encrypted
📂 Folder
🌄 Image
📄 PDF, Word, or Open Office document
📹 Video
By default, items are listed starting with the most recently modified.
To reverse the order, use the -r
or --reverse
flag:
❯ nb ls
home
----
[2] Todos
[3] Example Title
[1] Ideas
❯ nb ls --reverse
[1] Ideas
[3] Example Title
[2] Todos
Notes can be sorted with the -s
/ --sort
flag,
which can be combined with -r
/ --reverse
:
❯ nb ls
home
----
[2] Sample Title
[3] Example Title
[1] Demo Title
❯ nb ls --sort
[1] Demo Title
[2] Sample Title
[3] Example Title
❯ nb ls --sort --reverse
[3] Example Title
[2] Sample Title
[1] Demo Title
nb
with no subcommand behaves like an alias for nb ls
,
so the examples above can be run without the ls
:
❯ nb
home
----
[2] Sample Title
[3] Example Title
[1] Demo Title
❯ nb example
[3] Example Title
❯ nb 3 --excerpt
[3] Example Title
-----------------
# Example Title
This is an example excerpt.
❯ nb 3 -e 8
[3] Example Title
-----------------
# Example Title
This is an example excerpt.
More example content:
- one
- two
❯ nb --sort
[1] Demo Title
[2] Sample Title
[3] Example Title
❯ nb --sort --reverse
[3] Example Title
[2] Sample Title
[1] Demo Title
Short options can be combined for brevity:
# equivalent to `nb --sort --reverse --excerpt 2` and `nb -s -r -e 2`:
❯ nb -sre 2
[3] Example Title
-----------------
# Example Title
[2] Sample Title
----------------
Sample Title
============
[1] Demo Title
--------------
---
title: Demo Title
nb
and nb ls
display the 15 most recently modified items.
The default limit can be changed with nb set limit <number>
.
To list a different number of items on a per-command basis, use the
-n <limit>
,
--limit <limit>
,
--<limit>
,
-a
,
and --all
flags:
❯ nb -n 1
home
----
[5] Example Five
4 omitted. 5 total.
❯ nb --limit 2
home
----
[5] Example Five
[4] Example Four
3 omitted. 5 total.
❯ nb --3
home
----
[5] Example Five
[4] Example Four
[3] Example Three
2 omitted. 5 total.
❯ nb --all
home
----
[5] Example Five
[4] Example Four
[3] Example Three
[2] Example Two
[1] Example One
Lists can be paginated with
-p <number>
/ --page <number>
,
which paginates by the value of nb set limit
by
default, or the value of
-n <limit>
,
--limit <limit>
,
or --<limit>
when present:
❯ nb
home
----
[6] Example Six
[5] Example Five
[4] Example Four
[3] Example Three
[2] Example Two
[1] Example One
❯ nb set limit 3
NB_LIMIT set to 3
❯ nb --page 1
[6] Example Six
[5] Example Five
[4] Example Four
❯ nb -p 2
[3] Example Three
[2] Example Two
[1] Example One
❯ nb -p 2 --limit 2
[4] Example Four
[3] Example Three
❯ nb -p 3 --2
[2] Example Two
[1] Example One
List #tagged items by passing \#escaped
or "#quoted"
hashtags
or tags specified with the --tags
option. Multiple tags perform an
AND
query:
# list items in the current notebook tagged with "#tag1", escaped
nb \#tag1
# list items in the "example" notebook tagged with "#tag2", quoted
nb example: "#tag2"
# list items in all notebooks tagged with "#tag1", long option
nb \#tag1 --all
# list items in the current notebook tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2"
nb \#tag1 "#tag2"
# list items in all notebooks tagged with "#tag2" AND "#tag3", short option
nb --tags tag2,tag3 -a
nb ls
is a combination of
nb notebooks
and nb list
in one view and accepts the same arguments as nb list
,
which lists only notes without the notebook list and with no limit by default:
❯ nb list
[100] Example One Hundred
[99] Example Ninety-Nine
[98] Example Ninety-Eight
... lists all notes ...
[2] Example Two
[1] Example One
For more information about options for listing notes, run
nb help ls
and
nb help list
.
Items can be listed within terminal and GUI web browsers using
nb browse
/ nb b
:
❯ nb browse example:sample/demo/
❯nb · example : sample / demo / +
search: [ ]
[example:sample/demo/7] Title Seven
[example:sample/demo/6] Title Six
[example:sample/demo/5] Title Five
[example:sample/demo/4] Title Four
[example:sample/demo/3] Title Three
next ❯
For more information, see Browsing.
You can edit an item in your editor with
nb edit
(shortcut: nb e
):
# edit note by id
nb edit 3
# edit note by filename
nb edit example.md
# edit note by title
nb edit "A Document Title"
# edit note 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb edit example:12
# edit note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 edit
# edit note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:edit 12
edit
and other subcommands that take an identifier
can be called with the identifier and subcommand name reversed:
# edit note by id
nb 3 edit
nb edit
can also receive piped content, which it
appends to the specified note without opening the editor:
echo "Content to append." | nb edit 1
Content can be passed with the --content <content>
option,
which also appends the content without opening the editor:
nb edit 1 --content "Content to append."
Use the --overwrite
option to overwrite existing file content
and the --prepend
option to prepend the new content before existing content.
When content is piped or specified with --content <content>
,
use the --edit
flag to open the file in the editor
before the change is committed.
When a note is encrypted,
nb edit
prompts you for the note password,
opens the unencrypted content in your editor,
and then automatically reencrypts the note when you are done editing.
nb edit
can be called by the shortcut alias, nb e
:
# edit note by id
nb e 3
# edit note by filename
nb e example.md
# edit note by title
nb e "A Document Title"
# edit note by id, alternative
nb 3 e
# edit note 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb e example:12
# edit note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 e
# edit note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:e 12
For nb edit
help information, run nb help edit
.
Items can be edited within terminal and GUI web browsers using
nb browse edit
/ nb b e
:
❯ nb browse edit text:formats/markdown/123
❯nb · text : formats / markdown / 123 · ↓ · editing · - | +
[# Daring Fireball: Markdown (daringfireball.net) ]
[ ]
[<https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/> ]
[ ]
[## Related ]
[ ]
[- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown> ]
[ ]
[## Comments ]
[ ]
[See also: ]
[ ]
[- [[text:formats/org]] ]
[- [[cli:apps/nb]] ]
[ ]
[## Tags ]
[ ]
[save] · last: 2021-01-01 01:00:00
For more information, see
browse edit
and Browsing.
↑ ·
nb show
,
nb browse
,
nb open
,
nb peek
Notes and other items can be viewed using
nb show
(shortcut: nb s
):
# show note by id
nb show 3
# show note by filename
nb show example.md
# show note by title
nb show "A Document Title"
# show note by id, alternative
nb 3 show
# show note 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb show example:12
# show note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 show
# show note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:show 12
By default, nb show
opens notes in
less
,
with syntax highlighting if
bat
,
highlight
,
or
Pygments
is installed.
You can navigate in less
using the following keys:
Key Function
--- --------
mouse scroll Scroll up or down
arrow up or down Scroll one line up or down
f Jump forward one window
b Jump back one window
d Jump down one half window
u Jump up one half window
/<query> Search for <query>
n Jump to next <query> match
q Quit
If less
scrolling isn't working in iTerm2,
go to
"Settings"
-> "Advanced"
-> "Scroll wheel sends arrow keys when in alternate screen mode"
and change it to "Yes".
More Info
Use the -p
/ --print
option
to print to standard output with syntax highlighting:
❯ nb show 123 --print
# Example Title
Example content:
- one
- two
- three
Use nb show --print --no-color
to print without syntax highlighting.
When Pandoc is available,
use the -r
/ --render
option to
render the note to HTML and open it in your terminal browser:
nb show example.md --render
# opens example.md as an HTML page in w3m, links, or lynx
nb show
also supports previewing other file types in the terminal,
depending on the tools available in the environment. To prefer specific tools
for certain file types, nb
provides configuration variables that can be
set in your ~/.nbrc
file,
which can be opened in your editor with nb settings edit
.
Supported file types and tools include:
- Markdown files (
$NB_MARKDOWN_TOOL
): - PDF files:
termpdf.py
with kittypdftotext
- Audio files (
$NB_AUDIO_TOOL
): - Images (
$NB_IMAGE_TOOL
):catimg
- Chafa
- ImageMagick with a terminal that supports sixels
imgcat
with iTerm2- kitty's
icat
kitten termvisage
timg
viu
- Folders, Directories, Notebooks (
$NB_DIRECTORY_TOOL
): - Word Documents:
- Excel, CSV, TSV, and data files (
$NB_DATA_TOOL
): - EPUB ebooks:
When using nb show
with other file types or
if the above tools are not available,
nb show
opens files in
your system's preferred application for each type.
nb show
also provides options for
querying information about an item. For example, use the
--added
/ -a
and --updated
/ -u
flags to print the date and time that an item was added or updated:
❯ nb show 2 --added
2020-01-01 01:01:00 -0700
❯ nb show 2 --updated
2020-02-02 02:02:00 -0700
nb show
is primarily intended for viewing items within the terminal.
To view a file in the system's preferred GUI application, use
nb open
.
To browse rendered items in terminal and GUI web browsers, use
nb browse
.
For full nb show
usage information, run nb help show
.
nb show
can be called using the shortcut alias nb s
:
# show note by id
nb s 3
# show note by filename
nb s example.md
# show note by title
nb s "A Document Title"
# show note by id, alternative
nb 3 s
# show note 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb s example:12
# show note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 s
# show note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:s 12
nb show
can also be invoked with nb view
for convenience:
# show note by id
nb view 3
# show note by filename
nb view example.md
# show note by title
nb view "A Document Title"
# show note by id, alternative
nb 3 view
Items can be viewed within terminal and GUI web browsers using
nb browse
/ nb b
:
❯ nb browse text:formats/markdown/123
❯nb · text : formats / markdown / 123 · ↓ · edit | +
Daring Fireball: Markdown (daringfireball.net)
https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/
Related
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown
Comments
See also:
• [[text:formats/org]]
• [[cli:apps/nb]]
Tags
#markup #plain-text
Content
Daring Fireball: Markdown
Download
Markdown 1.0.1 (18 KB) — 17 Dec 2004
Introduction
Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows
you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then
convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
For more information, see Browsing.
↑ ·
nb delete
,
nb browse delete
To delete one or more notes, pass any number of
ids, filenames, titles, and other selectors
to nb delete
(shortcuts: nb d
, nb -
):
# delete item by id
nb delete 3
# delete item by filename
nb delete example.md
# delete item by title
nb delete "A Document Title"
# delete item by id, alternative
nb 3 delete
# delete item 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb delete example:12
# delete item 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 delete
# delete item 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:delete 12
# delete item 345 in the folder named "example"
nb delete example/345
# delete items with the ids 89, 56, and 21
nb delete 89 56 21
By default, nb delete
will display a confirmation prompt.
To skip, use the --force
/ -f
option:
nb delete 3 --force
nb delete
has the aliases nb d
and nb -
:
# delete note by id
nb d 3
# delete note by filename
nb d example.md
# delete note by title
nb - "A Document Title"
# delete note by id, alternative
nb 3 d
# delete note 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb - example:12
# delete note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 d
# delete note 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:d 12
For nb delete
help information, run nb help delete
.
Items can be deleted within terminal and GUI web browsers using
nb browse delete
/ nb b d
:
❯ nb browse delete example:4
❯nb · example : 4 · ↓ · edit · - | +
deleting
[4] example_file.md "Example Title"
[delete]
For more information, see Browsing.
↑ ·
nb <url>
,
nb browse
,
nb bookmark
,
nb open
,
nb peek
,
nb show
nb
includes a bookmarking system to conveniently
create, annotate, view, search, browse, and manage
collections of bookmarks.
Bookmarks in nb
are stored as
simple structured Markdown files
containing information extracted from the bookmarked pages.
To create a new bookmark, pass a URL as the first argument to nb
:
nb https://example.com
nb
automatically generates a bookmark using information from the page:
# Example Title (example.com)
<https://example.com>
## Description
Example description.
## Content
Example Title
=============
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
[More information\...](https://www.iana.org/domains/example)
nb
embeds the page content in the bookmark, making it available for
full text search with nb search
and
locally-served, distraction-free reading and browsing
with nb browse
.
When Pandoc is installed,
the HTML page content is converted to Markdown.
When readability-cli
is installed, markup is cleaned up to focus on content. When
Chromium or
Chrome is installed,
JavaScript-dependent pages are rendered and the resulting markup is
saved.
Many shells automatically escape special characters in URLs. If a
URL contains characters that are preventing it from being saved in full,
URLs can also be enclosed in quotes when passed to nb
:
nb "https://example.com#sample-anchor"
In addition to caching the page content,
you can also include a quote from the page in a
## Quote
section
using the
-q <quote>
/ --quote <quote>
option:
nb https://example.com --quote "Example quote line one.
Example quote line two."
# Example Title (example.com)
<https://example.com>
## Description
Example description.
## Quote
> Example quote line one.
>
> Example quote line two.
## Content
Example Title
=============
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
[More information\...](https://www.iana.org/domains/example)
Add a comment in a ## Comment
section using the
-c <comment>
/ --comment <comment>
option:
nb https://example.com --comment "Example comment."
# Example Title (example.com)
<https://example.com>
## Description
Example description.
## Comment
Example comment.
## Content
Example Title
=============
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
[More information\...](https://www.iana.org/domains/example)
Add related URLs and linked selectors
to a ## Related
section using the
-r (<url> | <selector>)
/
--related (<url> | <selector>)
option:
nb https://example.com --related example:123 -r https://example.net
# Example Title (example.com)
<https://example.com>
## Description
Example description.
## Related
- [[example:123]]
- <https://example.net>
## Content
Example Title
=============
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
[More information\...](https://www.iana.org/domains/example)
Bookmarks can be tagged using the
-t <tag1>,<tag2>...
/
--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...
option.
Tags are converted into #hashtags and
added to a ## Tags
section:
nb https://example.com --tags tag1,tag2
# Example Title (example.com)
<https://example.com>
## Description
Example description.
## Tags
#tag1 #tag2
## Content
Example Title
=============
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
[More information\...](https://www.iana.org/domains/example)
Search for tagged bookmarks with
nb search
/ nb q
:
nb search --tag tag1
nb q -t tag1
nb q \#tag1
nb search
/ nb q
automatically searches archived page content:
❯ nb q "example query"
[10] 🔖 example.bookmark.md "Example Bookmark (example.com)"
------------------------------------------------------------
5:Lorem ipsum example query.
Bookmarks can also be encrypted:
# create a new password-protected, encrypted bookmark
nb https://example.com --encrypt
Encrypted bookmarks require a password before they can be viewed or opened.
Multiple URLs can be bookmarked with a single command by passing
multiple <url>
arguments. Additional arguments will be reused
for each bookmark:
❯ nb https://example.com https://example.net --tags tag1,tag2 --filename example
Added: [1] 🔖 example.bookmark.md "Example Domain (example.com)"
Added: [2] 🔖 example-1.bookmark.md "Example Domain (example.net)"
Bookmarks are included in
nb
,
nb ls
,
nb list
,
and nb browse
along with items of other types.
nb bookmark
and nb bookmark list
can be used to
list and filter only bookmarks:
❯ nb bookmark
Add: nb <url> Help: nb help bookmark
------------------------------------
[3] 🔖 🔒 example.bookmark.md.enc
[2] 🔖 Bookmark Two (example.com)
[1] 🔖 Bookmark One (example.com)
❯ nb bookmark list two
[2] 🔖 Bookmark Two (example.com)
Bookmarks are also included in nb
, nb ls
, and nb list
:
❯ nb
home
----
[7] 🔖 Bookmark Three (example.com)
[6] Example Note
[5] 🔖 Bookmark Two (example.net)
[4] Sample Note
[3] 🔖 🔒 example-encrypted.bookmark.md.enc
[2] Demo Note
[1] 🔖 Bookmark One (example.com)
Use the --type <type>
/ --<type>
option as a filter to display only bookmarks:
❯ nb --type bookmark
[7] 🔖 Bookmark Three (example.com)
[5] 🔖 Bookmark Two (example.net)
[3] 🔖 🔒 example-encrypted.bookmark.md.enc
[1] 🔖 Bookmark One (example.com)
❯ nb --bookmark
[7] 🔖 Bookmark Three (example.com)
[5] 🔖 Bookmark Two (example.net)
[3] 🔖 🔒 example-encrypted.bookmark.md.enc
[1] 🔖 Bookmark One (example.com)
nb
saves the domain in the title, making it easy to filter by domain
using any list subcommands:
❯ nb example.com
[7] 🔖 Bookmark Three (example.com)
[1] 🔖 Bookmark One (example.com)
For more listing options, see
nb help ls
,
nb help list
,
and nb help bookmark
.
nb bookmark
can also be used with the aliases
nb bk
and nb bm
:
❯ nb bk
Add: nb <url> Help: nb help bookmark
------------------------------------
[7] 🔖 Bookmark Three (example.com)
[5] 🔖 Bookmark Two (example.net)
[3] 🔖 🔒 example-encrypted.bookmark.md.enc
[1] 🔖 Bookmark One (example.com)
❯ nb bm example.net
[5] 🔖 Bookmark Two (example.net)
↑ ·
nb browse
,
nb open
,
nb peek
,
nb show
nb
provides multiple ways to view bookmark files, bookmarked content,
and bookmarked URLs.
Use nb browse
(shortcut: nb b
)
to browse bookmarks with cached content,
[[wiki-style links]],
linked #tags, and external links:
❯ nb browse text:formats/markdown/123
❯nb · text : formats / markdown / 123 · ↓ · edit | +
Daring Fireball: Markdown (daringfireball.net)
https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/
Related
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown
Comments
See also:
• [[text:formats/org]]
• [[cli:apps/nb]]
Tags
#markup #plain-text
Content
Daring Fireball: Markdown
Download
Markdown 1.0.1 (18 KB) — 17 Dec 2004
Introduction
Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows
you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then
convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
For more information, see Browsing.
nb open
(shortcut: nb o
) opens the bookmarked URL in
your system's primary web browser:
# open bookmark by id
nb open 3
# open bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb open example:12
# open bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 open
# open bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:open 12
N.B. To use nb open
with
WSL,
install wslu.
nb peek
(shortcut: nb p
, alias: nb preview
)
opens the bookmarked URL in your terminal web browser,
such as
w3m,
Links, or
Lynx:
# peek bookmark by id
nb peek 3
# peek bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb peek example:12
# peek bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 peek
# peek bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:peek 12
nb open
and nb peek
work seamlessly with encrypted bookmarks.
nb
simply prompts you for the bookmark's password.
nb open
and nb peek
automatically check whether the URL is still valid.
If the page has been removed, nb
can check
the Internet Archive Wayback Machine
for an archived copy.
The preferred terminal web browser can be set using
the $BROWSER
environment variable,
assigned in ~/.bashrc
, ~/.zshrc
, or similar:
export BROWSER=lynx
When $BROWSER
is not set, nb
looks for
w3m
,
links
, and
lynx
and uses the first one it finds.
$BROWSER
can also be used to easy specify the terminal browser for
an individual command:
❯ BROWSER=links nb 12 peek
# opens the URL from bookmark 12 in links
❯ BROWSER=w3m nb 12 peek
# opens the URL from bookmark 12 in w3m
nb show
and nb edit
can also be used to view and edit bookmark files,
which include the cached page converted to Markdown.
nb show <id> --render
/ nb show <id> -r
displays the bookmark file converted to HTML in the terminal web browser,
including all bookmark fields and the cached page content,
providing a cleaned-up, distraction-free, locally-served view of
the page content along with all of your notes.
nb open
and nb peek
can also be used with the shortcut aliases
nb o
and nb p
:
# open bookmark by id
nb o 3
# open bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb o example:12
# open bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 o
# peek bookmark by id
nb p 3
# peek bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb p example:12
# peek bookmark 12 in the notebook named "example", alternative
nb example:12 p
Bookmarks are identified by a .bookmark.md
file extension.
The bookmark URL is the first URL in the file within <
and >
characters.
To create a minimally valid bookmark file with nb add
:
nb add example.bookmark.md --content "<https://example.com>"
For a full overview, see
nb
Markdown Bookmark File Format.
nb
includes bookmark
, a full-featured
command line interface for creating, viewing, searching, and editing bookmarks.
bookmark
is a shortcut for the
nb bookmark
subcommand,
accepting all of the same subcommands and options with identical behavior.
Bookmark a page:
❯ bookmark https://example.com --tags tag1,tag2
Added: [3] 🔖 20200101000000.bookmark.md "Example Title (example.com)"
List and filter bookmarks with
bookmark
and bookmark list
:
❯ bookmark
Add: bookmark <url> Help: bookmark help
---------------------------------------
[3] 🔖 🔒 example.bookmark.md.enc
[2] 🔖 Example Two (example.com)
[1] 🔖 Example One (example.com)
❯ bookmark list two
[2] 🔖 Example Two (example.com)
View a bookmark in your terminal web browser:
bookmark peek 2
Open a bookmark in your system's primary web browser:
bookmark open 2
Perform a full text search of bookmarks and archived page content:
❯ bookmark search "example query"
[10] 🔖 example.bookmark.md "Example Bookmark (example.com)"
------------------------------------------------------------
5:Lorem ipsum example query.
See bookmark help
for more information.
↑ ·
nb do
,
nb tasks
,
nb todo
,
nb undo
Use nb todo
(shortcut: nb to
)
to create, list, and update todos.
nb
todos are structured Markdown documents
referencing a single primary todo,
with optional tasks.
Use nb todo add
to create a new todo:
# create a new todo titled "Example todo one."
❯ nb todo add "Example todo one."
Added: [1] ✔️ [ ] Example todo one.
❯ nb show 1 --print
# [ ] Example todo one.
Use the --due <date>
option to add an optional due date in a
## Due
section:
# create a new todo titled "Example todo two." with a due date of "2100-01-01"
❯ nb todo add "Example todo two." --due "2100-01-01"
Added: [2] ✔️ [ ] Example todo two.
❯ nb show 2 --print
# [ ] Example todo two.
## Due
2100-01-01
Add an optional description with the
--description <description>
option:
❯ nb todo add "Example todo three." --description "Example description."
Added: [3] ✔️ [ ] Example todo three.
❯ nb show 3 --print
# [ ] Example todo three.
## Description
Example description.
Todos can have tasks.
Tasks added with one or more --task <task>
options
are represented as a markdown task list and placed in a
## Tasks
section:
❯ nb todo add "Example todo seven." --task "Task one." --task "Task two." --task "Task three."
Added: [7] ✔️ [ ] Example todo seven.
❯ nb show 7 --print
# [ ] Example todo seven.
## Tasks
- [ ] Task one.
- [ ] Task two.
- [ ] Task three.
Related URLs and linked selectors
can be added to a ## Related
field using the
-r (<url> | <selector>)
/ --related (<url> | <selector>)
option:
❯ nb todo add "Example todo four." --related example:123 -r https://example.com
Added: [4] ✔️ [ ] Example todo four.
❯ nb show 4 --print
# [ ] Example todo four.
## Related
- [[example:123]]
- <https://example.com>
Tags can be added to todos with the
--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...
option:
❯ nb todo add "Example todo five." --tags tag1,tag2
Added: [5] ✔️ [ ] Example todo five.
❯ nb show 5 --print
# [ ] Example todo five.
## Tags
#tag1 #tag2
Tags, links, and URLs can be
browsed
in terminal and GUI web browsers with nb browse
.
List todos in with nb todos
:
# list todos in the current notebook
❯ nb todos
[6] ✔️ [ ] Example todo six.
[5] ✅ [x] Example todo five.
[4] ✔️ [ ] Example todo four.
[3] ✅ [x] Example todo three.
[2] ✅ [x] Example todo two.
[1] ✔️ [ ] Example todo one.
# list todos in the notebook named "sample"
❯ nb todos sample:
[sample:4] ✅ [x] Sample todo four.
[sample:3] ✔️ [ ] Sample todo three.
[sample:2] ✔️ [ ] Sample todo two.
[sample:1] ✅ [x] Sample todo one.
Open / undone todos can be listed with nb todos open
:
# list open todos in the current notebook
❯ nb todos open
[6] ✔️ [ ] Example todo six.
[4] ✔️ [ ] Example todo four.
[1] ✔️ [ ] Example todo one.
# list open todos in the notebook named "sample"
❯ nb tasks open sample:
[sample:3] ✔️ [ ] Sample todo three.
[sample:2] ✔️ [ ] Sample todo two.
Closed / done todos can be listed with nb todos closed
:
# list closed todos in the current notebook
❯ nb todos closed
[5] ✅ [x] Example todo five.
[3] ✅ [x] Example todo three.
[2] ✅ [x] Example todo two.
# list closed todos in the notebook named "sample"
❯ nb tasks closed sample:
[sample:4] ✅ [x] Sample todo four.
[sample:1] ✅ [x] Sample todo one.
See
nb help todo
for more information.
Mark a todo as done or closed with nb do
:
# add a new todo titled "Example todo six."
❯ nb todo add "Example todo six."
Added: [6] ✔️ [ ] Example todo six.
# mark todo 6 as done / closed
❯ nb do 6
Done: [6] ✅ [x] Example todo six.
Re-open a closed todo with nb undo
:
# mark todo 6 as undone / open
❯ nb undo 6
Undone: [6] ✔️ [ ] Example todo six.
See
nb help do
and
nb help undo
for more information.
↑ ·
nb do
,
nb tasks
,
nb todo
,
nb undo
nb
can list and update tasks in todos and other Markdown documents.
Tasks are defined as one or more Markdown list items starting with
- [ ]
to indicate an open task or - [x]
to indicate a done / closed task:
- [ ] Example open task.
- [x] Example closed task.
List tasks in items, folders, and notebooks with
nb tasks
(shortcut: nb t
),
which lists both tasks and todos:
# list tasks in item 7
❯ nb tasks 7
[7] ✔️ [ ] Example todo seven.
------------------------------
[7 1] [x] Task one.
[7 2] [x] Task two.
[7 3] [ ] Task three.
# list tasks and todos in the notebook named "example"
❯ nb tasks example:
[example:9] ✔️ [ ] Example todo nine.
[example:8] ✅ [x] Example todo eight.
--------------------------------------
[example:8 1] [x] Task one.
[example:8 2] [x] Task two.
[example:6] ✔️ [ ] Example todo six.
[example:4] Example Note Title
------------------------------
[example:4 1] [ ] Task one.
[example:4 2] [x] Task two.
[example:4 3] [ ] Task three.
[example:3] ✔️ [ ] Example todo three.
Open / undone tasks can be listed with nb tasks open
:
# list open tasks in item 7
❯ nb tasks open 7
[7] ✔️ [ ] Example todo seven.
------------------------------
[7 3] [ ] Task three.
# list open tasks and todos in the notebook named "example"
❯ nb tasks open example:
[example:9] ✔️ [ ] Example todo nine.
[example:6] ✔️ [ ] Example todo six.
[example:4] Example Note Title
------------------------------
[example:4 1] [ ] Task one.
[example:4 3] [ ] Task three.
[example:3] ✔️ [ ] Example todo three.
Closed / done tasks can be listed with nb tasks closed
:
# list closed tasks in item 7
❯ nb tasks closed 7
[7] ✔️ [ ] Example todo seven.
------------------------------
[7 1] [x] Task one.
[7 2] [x] Task two.
# list closed tasks and todos in the notebook named "example"
❯ nb tasks closed example:
[example:8] ✅ [x] Example todo eight.
--------------------------------------
[example:8 1] [x] Task one.
[example:8 2] [x] Task two.
[example:4] Example Note Title
------------------------------
[example:4 2] [x] Task two.
Tasks are identified by the item selector, followed by a space, then followed by the sequential number of the task in the file.
Use nb do
to mark tasks as done / closed:
# list tasks in item 9
❯ nb tasks 9
[9] ✔️ [ ] Example todo nine.
-----------------------------
[9 1] [ ] Task one.
[9 2] [ ] Task two.
[9 3] [ ] Task three.
# mark task 2 in item 9 as done / closed
❯ nb do 9 2
[9] ✔️ [ ] Example todo nine.
-----------------------------
Done: [9 2] [x] Task two.
# list tasks in item 9
❯ nb tasks 9
[9] ✔️ [ ] Example todo nine.
-----------------------------
[9 1] [ ] Task one.
[9 2] [x] Task two.
[9 3] [ ] Task three.
Undo a done / closed task with nb undo
:
# mark task 2 in item 9 as undone / open
❯ nb undo 9 2
[9] ✔️ [ ] Example todo nine.
-----------------------------
Undone: [9 2] [ ] Task two.
# list tasks in item 9
❯ nb tasks 9
[9] ✔️ [ ] Example todo nine.
-----------------------------
[9 1] [ ] Task one.
[9 2] [ ] Task two.
[9 3] [ ] Task three.
See
nb help tasks
for more information.
↑ ·
nb add
,
nb bookmark
,
nb browse
,
nb list
,
nb ls
,
nb search
nb
recognizes #hashtags
defined anywhere within a document.
A hashtag is defined in nb
as a #
character followed by any number of
letters, numbers, underscores, and dashes.
Notes and bookmarks can be tagged when they are created using the
--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...
option,
which is available with
nb add
,
nb <url>
,
nb browse add
,
nb bookmark
,
and
nb todo
.
--tags
takes a comma-separated list of tags, converts them to
#hashtags
,
and adds them to the document.
Tags added to notes with nb add --tags
are placed between the title
and body text:
❯ nb add --title "Example Title" "Example note content." --tags tag1,tag2
# Example Title
#tag1 #tag2
Example note content.
Tags added to bookmarks with
nb <url> --tags
and nb bookmark <url> --tags
are placed in a ## Tags
section:
❯ nb https://example.com --tags tag1,tag2
# Example Title (example.com)
<https://example.com>
## Description
Example description.
## Tags
#tag1 #tag2
## Content
Example Title
=============
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
[More information\...](https://www.iana.org/domains/example)
Tags added to todos with
nb todo add --tags
are placed in a ## Tags
section:
❯ nb todo add --tags tag1,tag2 "Example todo."
# [ ] Example todo.
## Tags
#tag1 #tag2
Use nb --tags
, nb ls --tags
,
and nb list --tags
to list the tags present in a notebook, folder, or item:
# list all tags found in items in the current notebook
nb --tags
# list all tags found in the folder named "example"
nb example/ --tags
# list all tags in the item with id 123 in the notebook named "sample"
nb sample:123 --tags
List tagged items by passing \#escaped
or "#quoted"
hashtags or tags
specified with the --tags
option to nb
/ nb ls
:
# list items in the current notebook tagged with "#tag1", escaped
nb \#tag1
# list items in the "example" notebook tagged with "#tag2", quoted
nb example: "#tag2"
# list items in all notebooks tagged with "#tag3", long option
nb --tags tag3 --all
# list items in all notebooks tagged with "#tag3", short option
nb --tags tag3 -a
Combine multiple tags to search for items containing all specified tags:
# list items in the current notebook tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2"
nb \#tag1 "#tag2"
# list items in the current notebook tagged with "#tag2" AND "#tag3"
nb --tags tag2,tag3
# list items in all notebooks tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2" AND "#tag3" AND "#tag4"
nb \#tag1 "#tag2" --tags tag3,tag4 --all
Tagged items can be searched with
nb search
/ nb q
:
# search for items tagged with "#tag1"
nb search --tag tag1
# search for items tagged with "#tag1", shortcut and short option
nb q -t tag1
# search for items tagged with "#tag1", shortcut and argument
nb q \#tag1
# search for items tagged with "#tag1", shortcut and argument, alternative
nb q "#tag1"
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2"
nb q --tag tag1 --tag tag2
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2", short options
nb q -t tag1 -t tag2
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2", arguments
nb q \#tag1 \#tag2
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2", tag list
nb q --tags tag1,tag2
# search for items tagged with either "#tag1" OR "#tag2", options
nb q -t tag1 --or -t tag2
# search for items tagged with either "#tag1" OR "#tag2", arguments
nb q \#tag1 --or \#tag2
# search for items tagged with either "#tag1" OR "#tag2", single argument
nb q "#tag1|#tag2"
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2" AND "#tag3"
nb q -t tag1 --tags tag2,tag3
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" OR "#tag2" OR "#tag3"
nb q -t tag1 --or --tags tag2,tag3
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" OR "#tag2" OR "#tag3"
nb q \#tag1 --or -t tag2 --or "#tag3"
Linked tags can be browsed with nb browse
,
providing another dimension of browsability in terminal and GUI web browsers,
complimenting [[wiki-style linking]].
Tags in notes,
bookmarks,
files in text-based formats,
Word .docx
documents,
and Open Document .odt
files
are rendered as links to the list of items in the notebook sharing that tag:
❯nb · example : 321
Example Title
#tag1 #tag2
Example content with link to [[Sample Title]].
More example content:
- one
- two
- three
Use the -t <tag>
/ --tag <tag>
option
to open nb browse
to the list of
all items in the current notebook or a specified notebook or folder that
share a tag:
# open to a list of items tagged with "#tag2" in the "example" notebook
❯ nb browse example: --tag tag2
❯nb · example
search: [#tag2 ]
[example:321] Example Title
[example:654] Sample Title
[example:789] Demo Title
# shortcut alias and short option
❯ nb b example: -t tag2
❯nb · example
search: [#tag2 ]
[example:321] Example Title
[example:654] Sample Title
[example:789] Demo Title
For more information about full-text search, see
Search and nb search
.
For more information about browsing, see
Browsing and nb browse
.
Notes,
bookmarks,
files in text-based formats,
Word .docx
documents,
and Open Document .odt
files
can reference other items using
[[wiki-style links]],
making nb
a powerful terminal-first platform for
Zettelkasten,
wiki-style knowledge mapping,
and other link-based note-taking methods.
To add a link from a note or bookmark to another in the same notebook, include the id, title, or relative path for the target item within double square brackets anywhere in the linking document:
# link to the item with id 123 in the root level of current notebook
[[123]]
# link to the item titled "Example Title" in the root level of the current notebook
[[Example Title]]
# link to the item with id 456 in the folder named "Sample Folder"
[[Sample Folder/456]]
# link to the item titled "Demo Title" in the folder named "Sample Folder"
[[Sample Folder/Demo Title]]
To link to an item in another notebook, add the notebook name with a colon before the identifier:
# link to the item with id 123 in the "sample" folder in the "example" notebook
[[example:sample/123]]
# link to the item titled "Example Title" in the "demo" notebook
[[demo:Example Title]]
# link to the item with filename "Example File.md" in the "sample" notebook
[[sample:Example File.md]]
The text for a link can be specified after a pipe |
character:
# render link to item 123 in the "example" notebook as [[Example Link Text]]
[[example:123|Example Link Text]]
[[wiki-style links]] cooperate well with Org links, which have a similar syntax, providing a convenient option for linking collections of Org files.
Linked items can be browsed with nb browse
.
For more information about identifying items, see Selectors.
Use nb browse
(shortcut: nb b
) to
browse, view, edit, and search linked notes, bookmarks, notebooks, folders,
and other items using terminal and GUI web browsers.
nb browse
includes an embedded, terminal-first web application
that renders
[[wiki-style links]]
and
#hashtags
as internal links, enabling you to browse your notes and notebooks in web
browsers, including seamlessly browsing to and from the offsite links in
bookmarks and notes.
❯ nb browse
❯nb · home : +
search: [ ]
[home:6] 📌 Example Markdown Title
[home:12] 🔒 example-encrypted.md.enc
[home:11] 🔖 Example Bookmark (example.com)
[home:10] 🔖 🔒 example-encrypted.bookmark.md.enc
[home:9] Example .org Title
[home:8] 🌄 example-image.png
[home:7] 📄 example.pdf
[home:5] 🔉 example-audio.mp3
[home:4] Example LaTeX Title
[home:3] 📹 example-video.mp4
[home:2] example.md
[home:1] 📂 Example Folder
Lists are displayed using the same format as nb
and nb ls
,
including pinned items, with each list item linked.
Lists are automatically paginated to fit the height of the terminal window.
❯ nb browse example:sample/demo/
❯nb · example : sample / demo / +
search: [ ]
[example:sample/demo/7] Title Seven
[example:sample/demo/6] Title Six
[example:sample/demo/5] Title Five
[example:sample/demo/4] Title Four
[example:sample/demo/3] Title Three
next ❯
nb browse
is designed to make it easy to navigate within
terminal web browsers using only keyboard commands,
while also supporting mouse interactions.
The nb browse
interface includes links
to quickly jump to parent folders,
the current notebook,
and other notebooks.
nb browse
opens in
w3m,
Links,
or in the browser set in the $BROWSER
environment variable.
Use nb browse --gui
/ nb b -g
to
open in the system's primary GUI web browser.
To open a specific item in nb browse
,
pass the selector for the item, folder, or notebook
to nb browse
:
# open the item with id 42 in the folder named "sample" in the "example" notebook
❯ nb browse example:sample/42
❯nb · example : sample / 42 · ↓ · edit | +
Example Title
#tag1 #tag2
Example content with link to [[Demo Title]].
More example content:
• one
• two
• three
Items can also be browsed with
nb show --browse
/ nb s -b
,
which behaves identically.
nb browse
is particularly useful for bookmarks.
Cached content is rendered in the web browser along with comments and notes.
Internal and external links are easily accessible directly in the terminal,
providing a convenient, distraction-free approach for browsing collections
of bookmarks.
❯ nb browse text:formats/markdown/123
❯nb · text : formats / markdown / 123 · ↓ · edit | +
Daring Fireball: Markdown (daringfireball.net)
https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/
Related
• https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown
Comments
See also:
• [[text:formats/org]]
• [[cli:apps/nb]]
Tags
#markup #plain-text
Content
Daring Fireball: Markdown
Download
Markdown 1.0.1 (18 KB) — 17 Dec 2004
Introduction
Markdown is a text-to-HTML conversion tool for web writers. Markdown allows
you to write using an easy-to-read, easy-to-write plain text format, then
convert it to structurally valid XHTML (or HTML).
Notes, bookmarks, files in text-based formats, source code,
Word .docx
documents, and
Open Document .odt
files are converted into HTML and rendered in the browser. Use the down
arrow (↓
) link to view or download the original file.
Items in text formats can be edited within terminal and GUI web browsers using
the edit
link on the item page or by opening the item with
nb browse edit
/ nb b e
,
which automatically resizes the form to fit the current terminal window:
❯ nb browse edit text:formats/markdown/123
❯nb · text : formats / markdown / 123 · ↓ · editing · - | +
[# Daring Fireball: Markdown (daringfireball.net) ]
[ ]
[<https://daringfireball.net/projects/markdown/> ]
[ ]
[## Related ]
[ ]
[- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Markdown> ]
[ ]
[## Comments ]
[ ]
[See also: ]
[ ]
[- [[text:formats/org]] ]
[- [[cli:apps/nb]] ]
[ ]
[## Tags ]
[ ]
[save] · last: 2021-01-01 01:00:00
Terminal web browsers provide different editing workflows.
w3m
opens items in your $EDITOR
,
then returns you back to the browser to save changes and continue browsing.
Edits in links
are performed directly in the browser.
Syntax highlighting, block selection, and other
advanced editor features
are available with nb browse --gui
.
Add an item within the browser using the +
link or
nb browse add
/ nb b a
.
Pass a notebook, folder, and / or filename selector to create a new note
in that location:
❯ nb browse add text:formats/
❯nb · text : formats / +
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[add]
nb browse add
includes options for quickly pre-populating
new notes with content:
❯ nb browse add --title "Example Title" --content "Example content." --tags tag1,tag2
❯nb · home : +
[# Example Title ]
[ ]
[#tag1 #tag2 ]
[ ]
[Example content. ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[ ]
[add]
Use the -
link on the nb browse edit
page or
nb browse delete
/ nb b d
to delete an item:
❯ nb browse delete example:4
❯nb · example : 4 · ↓ · edit · - | +
deleting
[4] example_file.md "Example Title"
[delete]
nb browse
includes a search field powered by
nb search
that can be used to search the current notebook or folder.
Search queries are treated as command line arguments for
nb search
,
providing the ability to perform AND
and OR
queries.
Use the
-q <query>
/ --query <query>
option to open nb browse
to
the results page for a search:
# open to a list of items containing "example" in the current notebook
❯ nb browse --query "example"
❯nb · home
search: [example ]
[home:321] Test Title
[home:654] Sample Title
[home:789] Demo Title
# using shortcut alias and short option
❯ nb b -q "example"
❯nb · home
search: [example ]
[home:321] Test Title
[home:654] Sample Title
[home:789] Demo Title
Search for #tags with the
-t
/ --tag
/ --tags
options:
# open to a list of items tagged with "#tag2" in the current notebook
❯ nb browse --tag tag2
❯nb · home
search: [#tag2 ]
[home:654] Sample Title
[home:789] Demo Title
# using shortcut alias and short option
❯ nb b -t tag2
❯nb · home
search: [#tag2 ]
[home:654] Sample Title
[home:789] Demo Title
For more information about search options, see Search and
nb search
.
To open any nb browse
view in
the system's primary GUI web browser,
add the nb browse --gui
/ nb b -g
option:
# open the item with id 123 in the "sample" notebook in the system's primary GUI browser
nb browse sample:123 --gui
# open the folder named "example" in the system's primary GUI browser,
# short option
nb browse example/ -g
# open the current notebook in the system's primary GUI browser,
# shortcut alias and short option
nb b -g
By default,
nb browse --gui
uses the browser's default <textarea>
for editing items.
Ace is a text editor for GUI web browsers that provides advanced text editing functionality, including block selection and syntax highlighting.
To use Ace as the editor for nb browse --gui
,
add the following line to your ~/.nbrc
file:
export NB_ACE_ENABLED=1
The next time a form is loaded in nb browse
,
nb
will automatically download
(from GitHub),
install,
and enable the Ace editor in
nb browse edit --gui
and nb browse add --gui
.
nb browse
depends on
either socat
or
ncat
(available as part of
the ncat
or nmap
package in most package managers) and
pandoc
. When neither socat
nor ncat
is
available and the Bash version is 5.2 or higher, nb browse
falls back to a pure Bash implementation that supports all features
except the Ace editor. When only pandoc
is available,
the current note is rendered and
[[wiki-style links]]
go to unrendered, original files.
When socat
,ncat
, or Bash 5.2+ is available without pandoc
,
files in plain text formats are rendered with the original markup unconverted.
If neither ncat
, socat
, Bash 5.2+, nor pandoc
is available,
nb browse
falls back to the default behavior of nb show
.
When nb
is installed on Windows,
socat
(MSYS,
Cygwin) is recommended.
nb browse
is completely local and self-contained within nb
,
from the CSS and JavaScript
all the way down through the HTTP request parsing and response building,
with no imports, libraries, frameworks, or third-party code
outside of the few binary dependencies
(bash
, git
, ncat
/ socat
, pandoc
),
the Linux / Unix environment,
and the optional Ace editor.
Terminal web browsers don't use JavaScript, so visits from them are not
visible to some web analytics tools.
nb browse
includes a number of additional features
to enhance privacy and avoid leaking information:
- Page content is cached locally within each bookmark file, making it readable in terminal and GUI web browsers without requesting the page again or needing to be connected to the internet.
<img>
tags in bookmarked content are removed to avoid requests.- Outbound links are automatically rewritten to use an exit page redirect to mitigate leaking information via the referer header.
- All pages include the
<meta name="referrer" content="no-referrer" />
tag. - Links include a
rel="noopener noreferrer"
attribute. lynx
is opened with the-noreferer
option.
To browse
items in AsciiDoc format,
install asciidoctor
.
nb browse
can also be used with the alias nb b
:
# open the current notebook in the terminal web browser
nb b
# open the item with id 123 in the "example" notebook using the terminal web browser
nb b example:123
# open the notebook named "sample" in the GUI web browser
nb b sample: -g
For more information, see nb browse
.
↑ ·
nb browse
,
nb import
,
nb open
,
nb show
nb
can be used to view, organize, browse, reference, and work with images in
terminals,
web browsers,
and GUI applications.
# import the image file "example.png" into the current notebook
nb import example.png
# import an image file from a URL into the current notebook
nb import https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwmx/nb/master/docs/images/nb.png
# nb import "sample.jpg" into the "demo" folder in the "example" notebook
nb import sample.jpg example:demo/
Imported images are displayed with 🌄
indicators in
lists:
❯ nb
home
----
[5] Example Five
[4] 🌄 example-image.png
[3] Example Three
[2] Example Two
[1] Example One
Imported image items can be opened in the system GUI application for
the item's file type using nb open
:
# open the image "example-image.png" in the system GUI photo viewer
nb open example-image.png
# open the image with id "4" in the system GUI photo viewer
nb 4 o
Image items can be viewed in web browsers with nb browse
,
providing a convenient mechanism for
browsing notebooks and folders containing image collections.
nb browse
renders image items within in an <img>
tag
on the item page. Open the item page for an image item by passing a
selector to nb browse
, optionally including the
-g
/ --gui
option
to open the page in the system GUI web browser:
# open item with id "123" in the terminal web browser
nb browse 123
# open item with id "456" in the "example" notebook in the GUI web browser
nb browse example:456 --gui
# open item "example:456" in the GUI web browser, alternative
nb example:456 b -g
The original file can be viewed or downloaded from the item page
by either clicking the image item or using the down arrow (↓
) link.
nb browse --gui
displays images in any GUI web browser.
Some terminal web browsers, such as w3m
,
can be configured to display images.
nb show
can display images directly in the terminal with
supported tools and configurations, including:
catimg
- Chafa
- ImageMagick with a terminal that supports sixels
imgcat
with iTerm2- kitty's
icat
kitten termvisage
timg
viu
A preferred image viewer tool can be set with the
$NB_IMAGE_TOOL
variable in your ~/.nbrc
file,
which can be opened in your editor with nb settings edit
.
Images can be referenced and rendered inline within notes, bookmarks, and other items.
To reference an image in the same notebook, specify the image's relative path within the notebook:
# reference "example.jpg" from markdown
![](example.jpg)
# reference "demo.png" in the "sample" folder from markdown
![](sample/demo.png)
Images in any notebook can be referenced using the --original
URL,
obtainable from the image's nb browse
item page
by either clicking the image item or using the down arrow (↓
) link.
# reference "example.jpg" in the "home" notebook with the --original URL
![](http://localhost:6789/--original/home/example.jpg)
Image references in content are rendered inline within web browsers with
nb browse
and nb show --render
.
<img>
tags are stripped from bookmarked content when rendering to HTML.
Inline images can still be used in other bookmark sections like
## Comment
.
Zettelkasten (German: "slip box") is a method of note-taking and personal knowledge management modeled around a few key features:
- Notes are taken liberally on index cards.
- Each note is numbered for easy reference.
- Index cards are organized into boxes.
- Index cards can reference other index cards.
- Cards can include tags and other metadata.
Since nb
works directly on plain text files
organized in normal system directories in normal git repositories,
nb
is a very close digital analogue to physical zettelkasten note-taking.
Zettelkasten | nb |
---|---|
index cards | notes & bookmarks |
numbering | ids & selectors |
slip boxes | notebooks |
tags | #tags |
metadata | front matter |
cross-references | [[wiki-style links]] |
fast note-taking | nb add /nb <url> |
For more information about Zettelkasten, see Wikipedia.
↑ ·
nb add
,
nb browse
,
nb folders
,
nb list
,
nb ls
Items can be organized in folders.
To add a note to a folder,
call nb add
with the folder's relative path within the notebook
followed by a slash:
# add a new note in the folder named "example"
nb add example/
# add a new note in the folder named "demo" in "example"
nb add example/demo/
nb
automatically creates any intermediate folders as needed.
Folders can be created directly using nb add folder
,
nb folders add
, and nb add --type folder
:
# create a new folder named "sample"
nb add folder sample
# create a new folder named "sample", alternative
nb folders add sample
# create a new folder named "demo"
nb add demo --type folder
# create a folder named "example" containing a folder named "test"
nb add example/test --type folder
To list the items in a folder, pass the folder relative path to
nb
,
nb ls
,
nb list
,
or nb browse
with a trailing slash:
❯ nb example/demo/
home
----
[example/demo/3] Title Three
[example/demo/2] Title Two
[example/demo/1] Title One
Folders can also be identified by the folder's id and listed with a trailing slash:
❯ nb list
[1] 📂 example
❯ nb list 1/
[example/2] 📂 demo
[example/1] document.md
❯ nb list 1/2/
[example/demo/3] Title Three
[example/demo/2] Title Two
[example/demo/1] Title One
Items in folders can be idenitified with the folder's relative path using either folder ids or names, followed by the id, title, or filename of the item:
# list item 1 ("Title One", one.md) in the example/demo/ folder
nb list example/demo/1
# edit item 1 ("Title One", one.md) in the example/demo/ folder
nb edit example/2/one.md
# show item 1 ("Title One", one.md) in the example/demo/ folder
nb show 1/2/Title\ One
# delete item 1 ("Title One", one.md) in the example/demo/ folder
nb delete 1/demo/1
For folders and items in other notebooks, combine the relative path with the notebook name, separated by a colon:
# list the contents of the "sample" folder in the "example" notebook
nb example:sample/
# add an item to the "sample/demo" folder in the "example" notebook
nb add example:sample/demo/
# edit item 3 in the "sample/demo" folder in the "example" notebook
nb edit example:sample/demo/3
Browse starting at any folder with nb browse
:
❯ nb browse example:sample/demo/
❯nb · example : sample / demo /
search: [ ]
[example:sample/demo/5] Title Five
[example:sample/demo/4] Title Four
[example:sample/demo/3] Title Three
[example:sample/demo/2] Title Two
[example:sample/demo/1] Title One
For more information about identifying folders, see Selectors.
↑ ·
nb pin
,
nb unpin
,
nb ls
,
nb browse
Items can be pinned so they appear first in
nb
, nb ls
, and nb browse
:
❯ nb
home
----
[2] 📌 Title Two
[5] Title Five
[4] Title Four
[3] Title Three
[1] Title One
Use nb pin
and nb unpin
to pin and unpin items:
❯ nb
home
----
[5] Title Five
[4] Title Four
[3] Title Three
[2] Title Two
[1] Title One
❯ nb pin 4
Pinned: [4] four.md "Title Four"
❯ nb pin 1
Pinned: [1] one.md "Title One"
❯ nb
home
----
[4] 📌 Title Four
[1] 📌 Title One
[5] Title Five
[3] Title Three
[2] Title Two
❯ nb unpin 4
Unpinned: [4] four.md "Title Four"
❯ nb
home
----
[1] 📌 Title One
[5] Title Five
[4] Title Four
[3] Title Three
[2] Title Two
nb
can also be configured to pin notes that contain
a specified #hashtag or other search pattern.
To enable tag / search-based pinning,
set the $NB_PINNED_PATTERN
environment variable to
the desired #tag or pattern.
For example, to treat all items tagged with #pinned
as pinned items,
add the following line to your ~/.nbrc
file,
which can be opened in your editor with nb settings edit
:
export NB_PINNED_PATTERN="#pinned"
All indicator icons in nb
can be customized, so
to use a different character as the pindicator,
simply add a line like the following to your ~/.nbrc
file:
export NB_INDICATOR_PINNED="💖"
❯ nb
home
----
[1] 💖 Title One
[5] Title Five
[4] Title Four
[3] Title Three
[2] Title Two
To bump an item to the top of the list without pinning, use the
bump
plugin.
Use nb search
(shortcut: nb q
) to
perform full text searches, with support for regular expressions,
#tags, and AND
, OR
, and NOT
queries:
# search current notebook for "example query"
nb search "example query"
# search the notebook "example" for "example query"
nb search example: "example query"
# search the folder named "demo" for "example query"
nb search demo/ "example query"
# search all unarchived notebooks for "example query" and list matching items
nb search "example query" --all --list
# search for "example" AND "demo" with multiple arguments
nb search "example" "demo"
# search for "example" AND "demo" with option
nb search "example" --and "demo"
# search for "example" OR "sample" with argument
nb search "example|sample"
# search for "example" OR "sample" with option
nb search "example" --or "sample"
# search for items matching both "Example" AND "Sample", and NOT "Demo"
nb search "Example" --and "Sample" --not "Demo"
# search items containing the hashtag "#example"
nb search "#example"
# search with a regular expression
nb search "\d\d\d-\d\d\d\d"
# search bookmarks for "example"
nb search "example" --type bookmark
# search bookmarks for "example", alternative
nb bk q "example"
# search the current notebook for "example query"
nb q "example query"
# search the notebook named "example" for "example query"
nb q example: "example query"
# search all unarchived notebooks for "example query" and list matching items
nb q -la "example query"
nb search
prints the id number, filename,
and title of each matched file,
followed by each search query match and its line number,
with color highlighting:
❯ nb search "example"
[314] 🔖 example.bookmark.md "Example Bookmark (example.com)"
--------------------------------------------------------------
1:# Example Bookmark (example.com)
3:<https://example.com>
[2718] example.md "Example Note"
--------------------------------
1:# Example Note
To just print the note information line without the content matches,
use the -l
or --list
option:
❯ nb search "example" --list
[314] 🔖 example.bookmark.md "Example Bookmark (example.com)"
[2718] example.md "Example Note"
Multiple query arguments are treated as AND
queries,
returning items that match all queries.
AND
queries can also be specified with the
--and <query>
option:
# search for items tagged with "#example" AND "#demo" AND "#sample" using
# multiple arguments
nb q "#example" "#demo" "#sample"
# options
nb q "#example" --and "#demo" --and "#sample"
nb
matches AND
query terms regardless of where they appear in a document,
an improvement over most approaches for performing AND
queries
with command line tools,
which typically only match terms appearing on the same line.
OR
queries return items that match at least one of the queries
and can be created by separating terms in a single argument
with a pipe character |
or with the --or <query>
option:
# search for "example" OR "sample" with argument
nb q "example|sample"
# search for "example" OR "sample" with option
nb q "example" --or "sample"
--or
and --and
queries can be used together:
nb q "example" --or "sample" --and "demo"
# equivalent: example|sample AND demo|sample
NOT
queries exclude items that match the specified query and are
specified with --not <query>
, which can be used with
--and
and --or
:
# search for items that match "Example", excluding items that also match "Sample"
nb search "Example" --not "Sample"
# search for items matching both "Example" AND "Sample", and NOT "Demo"
nb search "Example" --and "Sample" --not "Demo"
Search for #tags with flexible
nb search --tags [<tags>]
/ nb q -t [<tags>]
options:
# search for tags in the current notebook
nb search --tags
# search for tags in the "sample" notebook, shortcut alias
nb sample:q --tags
# search for items tagged with "#tag1"
nb search --tag tag1
# search for items tagged with "#tag1", shortcut alias and short option
nb q -t tag1
# search for items tagged with "#tag1", shortcut alias and argument
nb q \#tag1
# search for items tagged with "#tag1", shortcut alias and argument, alternative
nb q "#tag1"
# search for items in the "sample" notebook tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2"
nb sample:search --tag tag1 --tag tag2
# search for items in the "sample" notebook tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2"
nb sample:q --tags tag1,tag2
# search for items in the current notebook tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2"
nb q --tag tag1 --tag tag2
# search for items in the current notebook tagged with "#tag1" OR "#tag2"
nb q -t tag1 --or -t tag2
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" AND "#tag2" AND "#tag3"
nb q -t tag1 --tags tag2,tag3
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" OR "#tag2" OR "#tag3"
nb q -t tag1 --or --tags tag2,tag3
# search for items tagged with "#tag1" OR "#tag2" OR "#tag3"
nb q \#tag1 --or -t tag2 --or "#tag3"
nb search
leverages Git's powerful built-in
git grep
.
nb
also supports performing searches with alternative search tools
using the --utility <name>
option.
Supported alternative search tools:
nb search
can also be used with the alias
nb q
(for "query"):
# search for "example" and print matching excerpts
nb q "example"
# search for "example" and list each matching file
nb q -l "example"
# search for "example" in all unarchived notebooks
nb q -a "example"
# search for "example" in the notbook named "sample"
nb sample:q "example"
For more information about search, see nb help search
.
Searches can be performed within terminal and GUI web browsers using
nb browse --query
/ nb b -q
:
❯ nb browse --query "#example"
❯nb · home : +
search: [#example ]
[home:7] Title Seven
[home:32] Title Thirty-Two
[home:56] Title Fifty-Six
[home:135] Title One Hundred and Thirty-Five
For more information, see Browsing.
Use nb move
(alias: nb rename
, shortcut: nb mv
)
to move and rename items:
# move "example.md" to "sample.org"
nb move example.md sample.org
# rename note 2 ("example.md") to "New Name.md"
nb rename 2 "New Name"
Items can be moved between notebooks and folders:
# move note 12 from the "example" notebook into "Sample Folder" in the "demo" notebook
nb move example:12 demo:Sample\ Folder/
When the file extension is omitted, the existing extension is used:
# rename "example.bookmark.md" to "New Name.bookmark.md"
nb move example.bookmark.md "New Name"
When only a file extension is specified, only the extension is updated:
# change the file extension of note 5 ("demo file.md") to .org ("demo file.org")
nb rename 5 .org
Use nb rename --to-bookmark
to change the extension of a note
to .bookmark.md
,
nb rename --to-todo
to change the extension to .todo.md
,
and nb rename --to-note
to change the extension
of a bookmark or todo to either .md
or the extension set with
nb set default_extension
:
# rename note 3 ("example.md") to a bookmark named "example.bookmark.md"
nb rename 3 --to-bookmark
# rename bookmark 6 ("sample.bookmark.md") to a note named "sample.md"
nb rename 6 --to-note
# rename note 7 ("demo.md") to a todo named "demo.todo.md"
nb rename 7 --to-todo
Use nb rename --to-title
to set the filename to the note title,
lowercased with spaces and disallowed filename characters replaced
with underscores:
❯ nb rename 12 --to-title
Moving: [12] 20210101010000.md "Example Title"
To: example_title.md
Proceed? [y/N]
Copy an item to a destination notebook, folder path, or filename
with nb copy
(alias: nb duplicate
):
# copy item 456 to "sample.md"
nb copy 456 sample.md
# copy item 678 to the "example" notebook
nb copy 678 example:
# copy item 789 to the "demo" folder
nb copy 789 demo/
# copy item 543 to test.md in the "sample" folder in the "example" notebook
nb copy 543 example:sample/test.md
Omit a destination to copy the item in place:
# copy item 123 ("example.md") to example-1.md
❯ nb copy 123
Added: [124] example-1.md
# copy item 123 ("example.md") to example-2.md, alias
❯ nb duplicate 123
Added: [125] example-2.md
For more information about moving, renaming, and copying items, see
nb help move
and nb help copy
.
Whenever a note is added, modified, or deleted,
nb
automatically commits the change to git transparently in the background.
Use nb history
to view the revision history of
any notebook, folder, or item:
# show history for current notebook
nb history
# show history for note number 4
nb history 4
# show history for note with filename example.md
nb history example.md
# show history for note titled "Example"
nb history Example
# show history for the notebook named "example"
nb example:history
# show history for the notebook named "example", alternative
nb history example:
# show the history for note 12 in the notebook named "example"
nb history example:12
nb history
uses git log
by default and prefers
tig
when available.
By default, git commits are attributed to the email and name configured in your
global git
configuration.
Change the email and name used for a notebook with
nb notebooks author
:
# edit the commit author email and name for the current notebook
❯ nb notebooks author
Current configuration for: home
--------------------------
email (global): example@example.test
name (global): Example Name
Update? [y/N]
# edit the commit author email and name for the notebook named "example"
❯ nb notebooks author example
Current configuration for: example
--------------------------
email (global): example@example.test
name (global): Example Name
Update? [y/N]
The updated author email and name applies to subsequent commits.
To use a different email and name from the beginning of a notebook's
history, create the new notebook using
nb notebooks add --author
or
nb notebooks init --author
.
↑ ·
nb notebooks
,
nb archive
,
nb unarchive
,
nb use
You can create additional notebooks, each of which has its own version history.
Create a new notebook with nb notebooks add
:
# add a notebook named example
nb notebooks add example
nb
and nb ls
list the available notebooks above the list of notes:
❯ nb
example · home
--------------
[3] Title Three
[2] Title Two
[1] Title One
Commands in nb
run within the current notebook, and identifiers
such as ids, filenames, and titles refer to notes within the current notebook.
nb edit 3
, for example, tells nb
to
edit
note with id 3
within the current notebook.
To switch to a different notebook, use nb use
:
# switch to the notebook named "example"
nb use example
If you are in one notebook and you want to perform a command in a different notebook without switching to it, add the notebook name with a colon before the command name:
# add a new note in the notebook "example"
nb example:add
# add a new note in the notebook "example", shortcut alias
nb example:a
# show note 5 in the notebook "example"
nb example:show 5
# show note 5 in the notebook "example", shortcut alias
nb example:s 5
# edit note 12 in the notebook "example"
nb example:edit 12
# edit note 12 in the notebook "example", shortcut alias
nb example:e 12
# search for "example query" in the notebook "example"
nb example:search "example query"
# search for "example query" in the notebook "example", shortcut alias
nb example:q "example query"
# show the revision history of the notebook "example"
nb example:history
The notebook name with colon can also be used as a modifier to the id, filename, or title:
# edit note 12 in the notebook "example"
nb edit example:12
# edit note 12 in the notebook "example", shortcut alias
nb e example:12
# edit note 12 in the notebook "example", alternative
nb example:12 edit
# edit note 12 in the notebook "example", alternative, shortcut alias
nb example:12 e
# show note titled "misc" in the notebook "example"
nb show example:misc
# show note titled "misc" in the notebook "example", shortcut alias
nb s example:misc
# delete note with filename "todos.md" in the notebook "example", alternative
nb example:todos.md delete
# delete note with filename "todos.md" in the notebook "example", alternative,
# shortcut alias
nb example:todos.md d
When a notebook name with colon is called without a subcommand,
nb
runs nb ls
in the specified notebook:
❯ nb example:
example · home
--------------
[example:3] Title Three
[example:2] Title Two
[example:1] Title One
A bookmark can be created in another notebook by specifying the notebook name with colon, then a space, then the URL and bookmark options:
# create a new bookmark in a notebook named "sample"
❯ nb sample: https://example.com --tags tag1,tag2
Notes can also be moved between notebooks:
# move note 3 from the current notebook to "example"
nb move 3 example:
# move note 5 in the notebook "example" to the notebook "sample"
nb move example:5 sample:
The flexibility of nb
's argument handling makes it easy to
build commands step by step as items are listed, filtered, viewed, and edited,
particularly in combination with shell history:
# list items in the "example" notebook
❯ nb example:
example · home
--------------
[example:3] Title Three
[example:2] Title Two
[example:1] Title One
# filter list
❯ nb example: three
[example:3] Title Three
# view item
❯ nb example:3 show
# opens item in `less`
# edit item
❯ nb example:3 edit
# opens item in $EDITOR
nb
tab completion is optimized for
frequently running commands in various notebooks using the colon syntax,
so installing the completion scripts is recommended
and makes working with notebooks easy, fluid, and fun.
For example, listing the contents of a notebook is usually as simple as typing
the first two or three characters of the name,
then pressing the <tab>
key,
then pressing <enter>
/ <return>
:
❯ nb exa<tab>
# completes to "example:"
❯ nb example:
example · home
--------------
[example:3] Title Three
[example:2] Title Two
[example:1] Title One
Scoped notebook commands are also available in tab completion:
❯ nb exa<tab>
# completes to "example:"
❯ nb example:hi<tab>
# completes to "example:history"
nb
is optimized to work well with a collection of notebooks, so
notebooks are a good way to organize notes and bookmarks by top-level topic.
#tags are searchable across notebooks and can be created ad hoc,
making notebooks and tags distinct and complementary organizational systems
in nb
.
Search for a tag in or across notebooks with
nb search
/ nb q
:
# search for #tag in the current notebook
nb q --tag tag
# search for #tag in all notebooks, short options
nb q -t tag -a
# search for #tag in the "example" notebook, argument
nb q example: "#tag"
By default, all nb
notebooks are global, making them
always accessible in the terminal regardless of the current working directory.
Global notebooks are stored in the directory configured in
nb set nb_dir
,
which is ~/.nb
by default.
nb
also supports creating and working with local notebooks.
Local notebooks are notebooks that are
anywhere on the system outside of $NB_DIR
.
Any folder can be an nb
local notebook, which is just a normal folder
that has been initialized as a git repository and contains an nb
.index file.
Initializing a folder as an nb
local notebook is a very easy way to
add structured git versioning to any folder of documents and other files.
When nb
runs within a local notebook,
the local notebook is set as the current notebook:
❯ nb
local · example · home
----------------------
[3] Title Three
[2] Title Two
[1] Title One
A local notebook is always referred to by the name local
and otherwise behaves just like a global notebook
whenever a command is run from within it:
# add a new note in the local notebook
nb add
# edit note 15 in the local notebook
nb edit 15
# move note titled "Todos" from the home notebook to the local notebook
nb move home:Todos local:
# move note 1 from the local notebook to the home notebook
nb move 1 home:
# search the local notebook for <query string>
nb search "query string"
# search the local notebook and all unarchived global notebooks for <query string>
nb search "query string" --all
Local notebooks can be created with nb notebooks init
:
# initialize the current directory as a notebook
nb notebooks init
# create a new notebook at ~/example
nb notebooks init ~/example
# clone an existing notebook to ~/example
nb notebooks init ~/example https://github.com/example/example.git
Local notebooks can also be created by exporting a global notebook:
# export global notebook named "example" to "../path/to/destination"
nb notebooks export example ../path/to/destination
# alternative
nb export example ../path/to/destination
Local notebooks can also be imported, making them global:
# import notebook or folder at "../path/to/notebook"
nb notebooks import ../path/to/notebook
# alternative
nb import ../path/to/notebook
nb notebooks init
and nb notebooks import
can be used together to easily turn any directory of existing files
into a global nb
notebook:
❯ ls
example-directory
❯ nb notebooks init example-directory
Initialized local notebook: /home/username/example-directory
❯ nb notebooks import example-directory
Imported notebook: example-directory
❯ nb notebooks
example-directory
home
↑ ·
nb archive
,
nb status
,
nb unarchive
Notebooks can be archived using
nb archive
(shortcut: nb ar
):
# archive the current notebook
nb archive
# archive the notebook named "example"
nb archive example
# archive the current notebook, shortcut alias
nb ar
# archive the notebook named "example", shortcut alias
nb ar example
When a notebook is archived it is not included in
nb
/ nb ls
output,
nb search --all
,
or tab completion,
nor synced automatically with nb sync --all
.
❯ nb
example1 · example2 · example3 · [1 archived]
---------------------------------------------
[3] Title Three
[2] Title Two
[1] Title One
Archived notebooks can still be used individually using normal notebook commands:
# switch the current notebook to the archived notebook "example"
nb use example
# run the `list` subcommand in the archived notebook "example"
nb example:list
Check a notebook's archival status with
nb status
(shortcut: nb st
) and
nb notebooks status
:
# print status information, including archival status, for the current notebook
nb status
# print status information, including archival status, for the notebook named "example"
nb status example
# print status information, including archival status, for the current notebook,
# shortcut alias
nb st
# print status information, including archival status, for the notebook named "example",
# shortcut alias
nb st example
# print the archival status of the current notebook
nb notebooks status
# print the archival status of the notebook named "example"
nb notebooks status example
Use nb unarchive
(shortcut: nb unar
)
to unarchive a notebook:
# unarchive the current notebook
nb unarchive
# unarchive the notebook named "example"
nb unarchive example
For more information about working with notebooks, see
nb help notebooks
,
nb help archive
,
and nb help unarchive
.
For technical details about notebooks, see
nb
Notebook Specification.
Each notebook can be synced with a remote git repository by
setting the remote URL using nb remote
:
# set the current notebook's remote to a private GitHub repository
nb remote set https://github.com/example/example
# set the remote for the notebook named "example"
nb example:remote set https://github.com/example/example
Any notebook with a remote URL will sync automatically every time a command is run in that notebook.
When you use nb
on multiple systems, you can
set a notebook on each system to the same remote
and nb
will keep everything in sync in the background
every time there's a change in that notebook.
Since each notebook has its own git history, you can have some notebooks syncing with remotes while other notebooks are only available locally on that system.
Many services provide free private git repositories, so
git syncing with nb
is easy, free, and vendor-independent.
You can also sync your notes using
Dropbox, Drive, Box, Syncthing, or another syncing tool
by changing your nb
directory with
nb set nb_dir <path>
,
and git syncing will still work simultaneously.
Clone an existing notebook by passing the URL to
nb notebooks add
:
# create a new notebook named "example" cloned from a private GitLab repository
nb notebooks add example https://gitlab.com/example/example.git
Turn off syncing for a notebook by removing the remote:
# remove the remote from the current notebook
nb remote remove
# remove the remote from the notebook named "example"
nb example:remote remove
Automatic git syncing can be turned on or off with
nb set auto_sync
.
To sync manually, use nb sync
:
# manually sync the current notebook
nb sync
# manually sync the notebook named "example"
nb example:sync
To bypass nb
syncing and run git
commands directly within a
notebook, use nb git
:
# run `git fetch` in the current notebook
nb git fetch origin
# run `git status` in the notebook named "example"
nb example:git status
Multiple notebooks can be synced to one remote using orphan branches.
An
orphan branch
is a branch with a history that is independent
from the repository's main
, master
,
or equivalent primary branch history.
To sync a notebook with a new orphan branch,
add the remote using nb remote set
and select the option to create a new orphan branch.
The name of orphan branch is derived from notebook name
and can alternatively be specified as an argument to
nb remote set
:
# set the remote for the current notebook to a remote URL and branch
nb remote set https://github.com/xwmx/example demo-branch
To create a notebook using an existing orphan branch on a remote,
pass the branch name to
nb init
,
nb notebooks add
, or
nb notebooks init
after the URL:
# initialize new "home" notebook with the branch "sample-branch" on the remote
nb init https://github.com/xwmx/example sample-branch
# add a new "example" notebook from the branch "example-branch" on the remote
nb notebooks add example https://github.com/xwmx/example example-branch
To list all branches on a remote, use nb remote branches
:
# list all branches on the current remote
nb remote branches
# list all branches on a remote repository identified by a URL
nb remote branches "https://github.com/xwmx/example"
For information about assigning remotes, see nb help remote
.
Syncing with private repositories requires configuring git to not prompt for credentials. For repositories cloned over HTTPS, credentials can be cached with git . For repositories cloned over SSH, keys can be added to the ssh-agent .
Use nb sync
within a notebook to determine
whether your configuration is working.
If nb sync
displays a password prompt,
then follow the instructions above to configure your credentials.
The password prompt can be used to authenticate, but
nb
does not cache or otherwise handle git credentials in any way,
so there will likely be multiple password prompts during each sync
if credentials are not configured.
nb
handles git operations automatically, so
you shouldn't ever need to use the git
command line tool directly.
nb
merges changes when syncing
and handles conflicts using a couple different strategies.
When nb sync
encounters a conflict in a text file
and can't cleanly merge overlapping local and remote changes,
nb
saves both versions within the file separated by git conflict markers
and prints a message indicating which files contain conflicting text.
Use nb edit
to remove the conflict markers
and delete any unwanted text.
For example, in the following file, the second list item was changed on two systems, and git has no way to determine which one we want to keep:
# Example Title
- List Item apple
<<<<<<< HEAD
- List Item apricot
=======
- List Item pluot
>>>>>>> 719od01... [nb] Commit
- List Item plum
The local change is between the lines starting with
<<<<<<<
and =======
,
while the remote change is between the
=======
and >>>>>>>
lines.
To resolve this conflict by keeping both items, simply
edit the file with nb edit
and
remove the lines starting with <<<<<<<
, =======
, and >>>>>>>
:
# Example Title
- List Item apple
- List Item apricot
- List Item pluot
- List Item plum
When nb
encounters a conflict in a binary file,
such as an encrypted note,
both versions of the file are saved in the notebook as individual files,
with --conflicted-copy
appended to the filename
of the version from the remote.
To resolve a conflicted copy of a binary file,
compare both versions and merge them manually,
then delete the --conflicted-copy
.
If you do encounter a conflict that nb
says it can't merge at all,
nb git
and nb run
can be used to
perform git and shell operations within the notebook
to resolve the conflict manually.
Please also
open an issue
with any relevant details
that could inform a strategy for handling any such cases automatically.
↑ ·
nb import
,
nb export
,
nb browse
Files of any type can be imported into a notebook using
nb import
(shortcut: nb i
).
nb edit
and nb open
open files in
your system's default application for that file type.
# import an image file
nb import ~/Pictures/example.png
# open image in your default image viewer
nb open example.png
# import a .docx file
nb import ~/Documents/example.docx
# open .docx file in Word or your system's .docx viewer
nb open example.docx
Multiple filenames and globbing are supported:
# import all files and directories in the current directory
nb import ./*
# import all markdown files in the current directory
nb import ./*.md
# import example.md and sample.md in the current directory
nb import example.md sample.md
nb import
can also download and import files directly from the web:
# import a PDF file from the web
nb import https://example.com/example.pdf
# Imported "https://example.com/example.pdf" to "example.pdf"
# open example.pdf in your system's PDF viewer
nb open example.pdf
Some imported file types have indicators to make them easier to identify in lists:
❯ nb
home
----
[6] 📖 example-ebook.epub
[5] 🌄 example-picture.png
[4] 📄 example-document.docx
[3] 📹 example-video.mp4
[2] 🔉 example-audio.mp3
[1] 📂 Example Folder
Notes, bookmarks, and other files can be exported using nb export
.
If Pandoc is installed,
notes can be automatically converted to any of the
formats supported by Pandoc.
By default, the output format is determined by the file extension:
# export a Markdown note to a .docx Microsoft Office Word document
nb export example.md /path/to/example.docx
# export a note titled "Movies" to an HTML web page.
nb export Movies /path/to/example.html
For more control over the pandoc
options, use the
nb export pandoc
subcommand:
# export note 42 as an epub with pandoc options
nb export pandoc 42 --from markdown_strict --to epub -o path/to/example.epub
nb export notebook
and nb import notebook
can be
used to export and import notebooks:
# export global notebook named "example" to "../path/to/destination"
nb export notebook example ../path/to/destination
# import notebook or folder at "../path/to/notebook"
nb import notebook ../path/to/notebook
nb export notebook
and nb import notebook
behave like aliases for
nb notebooks export
and nb notebooks import
,
and the subcommands can be used interchangeably.
For more information about imported and exported notebooks, see Global and Local Notebooks.
For nb import
and nb export
help information, see
nb help import
and nb help export
.
Items can be exported using terminal and GUI web browsers.
Use the down arrow (↓
) link
on the nb browse
item page
to download the original file:
❯ nb browse 123
❯nb · home : 123 · ↓ | +
example.pdf
↑ ·
Variables,
nb settings
,
nb unset
nb set
and nb settings
open the settings prompt,
which provides an easy way to change your nb
settings.
nb set
To update a setting in the prompt,
enter the setting name or number and then enter the new value.
nb
will add the setting to your ~/.nbrc
configuration file.
nb
can be configured to use a specific command line editor
using the editor
setting.
The settings prompt for a setting can be started by passing
the setting name or number to nb set
:
❯ nb set editor
[6] editor
------
The command line text editor used by `nb`.
• Example Values:
atom
code
emacs
hx
macdown
mate
micro
nano
pico
subl
vi
vim
EDITOR is currently set to vim
Enter a new value, unset to set to the default value, or q to quit.
Value:
A setting can also be updated without the prompt by
passing both the name and value to nb set
:
# set editor with setting name
❯ nb set editor code
EDITOR set to code
# set editor with setting number (6)
❯ nb set 6 code
EDITOR set to code
# set the color theme to blacklight
❯ nb set color_theme blacklight
NB_COLOR_THEME set to blacklight
# set the default `ls` limit to 10
❯ nb set limit 10
NB_LIMIT set to 10
Use nb settings get
to print the value of a setting:
❯ nb settings get editor
code
❯ nb settings get 6
code
Use
nb unset
or
nb settings unset
to unset a setting and revert to the default:
❯ nb unset editor
EDITOR restored to the default: vim
❯ nb settings get editor
vim
nb set
and nb settings
are aliases that refer to the same subcommand,
so the two subcommand names can be used interchangeably.
For more information about set
and settings
, see
nb help settings
.
↑ ·
nb set color_theme
,
nb set syntax_theme
,
nb set color_primary
,
nb set color_secondary
nb
uses color to highlight various interface elements, including
ids and selectors,
the current notebook name,
the shell prompt,
divider lines,
syntax elements,
and links.
nb
includes several built-in color themes
and also supports user-defined themes.
The current color theme can be set using nb set color_theme
:
nb set color_theme
Color themes are
nb
plugins with a .nb-theme
file extension.
.nb-theme
files are expected to contain one if
statement
testing for the theme name
and setting the color environment variables to tput
ANSI color numbers:
# turquoise.nb-theme
if [[ "${NB_COLOR_THEME}" == "turquoise" ]]
then
export NB_COLOR_PRIMARY=43
export NB_COLOR_SECONDARY=38
fi
View this theme as a complete file:
plugins/turquoise.nb-theme
Themes can be installed using nb plugins
:
❯ nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/turquoise.nb-theme
Plugin installed:
/home/example/.nb/.plugins/turquoise.nb-theme
Once a theme is installed,
use nb set color_theme
to set it as the current theme:
❯ nb set color_theme turquoise
NB_COLOR_THEME set to turquoise
The primary and secondary colors can also be overridden individually, making color themes easily customizable:
# open the settings prompt for the primary color
nb set color_primary
# open the settings prompt for the secondary color
nb set color_secondary
To view a table of available colors and numbers, run:
nb set colors
nb
displays files with syntax highlighting when
bat
,
highlight
,
or
Pygments
is installed.
When bat
is installed, syntax highlighting
color themes are available for both light and dark terminal backgrounds.
To view a list of available themes
and set the syntax highlighting color theme,
use nb set syntax_theme
.
Syntax highlighting is also available when
viewing and editing items in text formats with
nb browse --gui
,
which incorporates the color theme's primary color into the syntax theme:
nb
uses emoji characters to represent information about files in lists.
These characters are referred to internally as "indicators"
and can be customized by assigning a different character to
the indicator's environment variable in your ~/.nbrc
file,
which can be opened with nb settings edit
.
For example, to use a different indicator for pinned items,
add a line like the following to your ~/.nbrc
file:
export NB_INDICATOR_PINNED="✨"
To turn off an indicator, assign the variable to an empty string:
export NB_INDICATOR_PINNED=""
Available indicator variables with default values:
export NB_INDICATOR_AUDIO="🔉"
export NB_INDICATOR_BOOKMARK="🔖"
export NB_INDICATOR_DOCUMENT="📄"
export NB_INDICATOR_EBOOK="📖"
export NB_INDICATOR_ENCRYPTED="🔒"
export NB_INDICATOR_FOLDER="📂"
export NB_INDICATOR_IMAGE="🌄"
export NB_INDICATOR_PINNED="📌"
export NB_INDICATOR_TODO="✔️ "
export NB_INDICATOR_TODO_DONE="✅"
export NB_INDICATOR_VIDEO="📹"
astral
Zsh Theme - Displays the current notebook name in the context line of the prompt.
nb
includes support for plugins, which can be used to create new
subcommands, design themes, and otherwise extend the functionality of nb
.
nb
supports two types of plugins, identified by their file extensions:
.nb-theme
- Plugins defining color themes.
.nb-plugin
- Plugins defining new subcommands and adding functionality.
Plugins are managed with the nb plugins
subcommand and
are installed in the ${NB_DIR}/.plugins
directory.
Plugins can be installed from either a URL or a path using the
nb plugins install
subcommand.
# install a plugin from a URL
nb plugins install https://raw.githubusercontent.com/xwmx/nb/master/plugins/clip.nb-plugin
# install a plugin from a standard GitHub URL
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/example.nb-plugin
# install a theme from a standard GitHub URL
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/turquoise.nb-theme
# install a plugin from a path
nb plugins install plugins/example.nb-plugin
The <url>
should be the full URL to the plugin file.
nb
also recognizes regular GitHub URLs,
which can be used interchangeably with raw GitHub URLs.
Installed plugins can be listed with nb plugins
,
which optionally takes a name and prints full paths:
❯ nb plugins
clip.nb-plugin
example.nb-plugin
turquoise.nb-theme
❯ nb plugins clip.nb-plugin
clip.nb-plugin
❯ nb plugins --paths
/home/example/.nb/.plugins/clip.nb-plugin
/home/example/.nb/.plugins/example.nb-plugin
/home/example/.nb/.plugins/turquoise.nb-theme
❯ nb plugins turquoise.nb-theme --paths
/home/example/.nb/.plugins/turquoise.nb-theme
Use nb plugins uninstall
to uninstall a plugin:
❯ nb plugins uninstall example.nb-plugin
Plugin successfully uninstalled:
/home/example/.nb/.plugins/example.nb-plugin
Plugins are written in a Bash-compatible shell scripting language
and have an .nb-plugin
extension.
nb
includes a few example plugins:
Create a new subcommand in three easy steps:
_subcommands add "example"
_subcommands describe "example" <<HEREDOC
Usage:
nb example
Description:
Print "Hello, World!"
HEREDOC
_example() {
printf "Hello, World!\\n"
}
That's it! 🎉
View the complete plugin:
plugins/example.nb-plugin
With example.nb-plugin
installed, nb
includes an nb example
subcommand
that prints "Hello, World!"
For a full example,
clip.nb-plugin
add clipboard functionality to nb
and demonstrates how to create a
plugin using nb
subcommands and simple shell scripting.
You can install any plugin you create locally with
nb plugins install <path>
,
and you can publish it on GitHub, GitLab,
or anywhere else online and install it with
nb plugins install <url>
.
The nb
API is the command line interface, which is designed for
composability and provides a variety of powerful options for interacting with
notes, bookmarks, notebooks, and nb
functionality. Within plugins,
subcommands can be called using their function names, which are named with
leading underscores. Options can be used to output information in formats
suitable for parsing and processing:
# print the content of note 3 to standard output with no color
_show 3 --print --no-color
# list all unarchived global notebook names
_notebooks --names --no-color --unarchived --global
# list all filenames in the current notebook
_list --filenames --no-id --no-indicator
# print the path to the current notebook
_notebooks current --path
nb
automatically scans arguments for
selectors with notebook names
and updates the current notebook if a valid one is found.
Identifier selectors are passed to subcommands as arguments along with
any subcommand options. Use show <selector>
to query
information about the file specified in the selector. For example, to
obtain the filename of a selector-specified file, use
show <selector> --filename
:
_example() {
local _selector="${1:-}"
[[ -z "${_selector:-}" ]] && printf "Usage: example <selector>\\n" && exit 1
# Get the filename using the selector.
local _filename=
_filename="$(_show "${_selector}" --filename)"
# Rest of subcommand function...
}
notebooks current --path
returns the path to the current
notebook:
# _example() continued:
# get the notebook path
local _notebook_path=
_notebook_path="$(_notebooks current --path)"
# print the file at "${_notebook_path}/${_filename}" to standard output
cat "${_notebook_path}/${_filename}"
See
clip.nb-plugin
for a practical example using both show <selector>
and
notebooks current --path
along with other
subcommands called using their underscore-prefixed function names.
Items in nb
are primarily identified using structured arguments called
"selectors." Selectors are like addresses for notebooks, folders, and items.
A selector can be as simple as an id like 123
or folder path like example/
,
or it can combine multiple elements to identify
an item in a nested folder within a particular notebook, such as:
cli:tools/shellcheck/home-page.bookmark.md
An item, folder, or notebook selector is constructed by specifying the notebook name, folder path, and / or item identifier in the following pattern:
notebook:folder/path/item-idenitifer
Represented in a docopt-like format:
[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>]
Notebooks are identified by the notebook name followed by a colon. Folder and item identifiers without a notebook name refer to items within the current notebook. When a selector consists of notebook name and colon with no folder path or item identifier, the command runs in the root folder of the notebook:
# list items in the "example" notebook
nb example:
# add a new note named "Example Title" to the "example" notebook
nb add example: --title "Example Title"
# edit item with id "123" in the notebook "example"
nb edit example:123
A notebook selector can be combined with a subcommand name to run the command within the notebook:
# list all items in the "example" notebook and display excerpts
nb example:list -e
# edit item with id "123" in the "example" notebook
nb example:edit 123
# show the git history for the notebook named "example"
nb example:history
Folders are identified by relative path from the notebook root. Folders can be referenced by either id or name, and segments in nested paths can mix and match names and ids:
# list items in the folder named "sample" in the folder named demo"
nb sample/demo/
# add a new item to the folder named "demo" in the folder with id "3"
nb add 3/demo/
# show the history of the folder with id "4" in the folder named
# "sample" in the notebook named "example"
nb history example:sample/4/
A trailing slash indicates that the command is expected to operate on the contents of the folder. When a trailing slash is omitted, the selector refers to the folder itself:
❯ nb list sample
[1] 📂 sample
❯ nb list sample/
[sample/3] Title Three
[sample/2] Title Two
[sample/1] Title One
For more information about folders, see Folders.
An item is identified by id, filename, or title, optionally preceded by notebook name or folder path:
# edit item with id "123"
nb edit 123
# open the item titled "demo title" in the folder with id "3"
nb open 3/demo\ title
# show "file.md" in the "sample" folder in the "example" notebook
nb show example:sample/file.md
Items can also be specified using the full path:
# edit "demo.md" in the "sample" folder in the "home" notebook
nb edit /home/example/.nb/home/sample/demo.md
Idenitifer Selectors
123
example.md
title
relative/path/to/123
relative/path/to/demo.md
relative/path/to/title
/full/path/to/sample.md
notebook:123
notebook:example.md
notebook:title
notebook:relative/path/to/123
notebook:relative/path/to/demo.md
notebook:relative/path/to/title
Subcommand Selectors
notebook:
notebook:show
notebook:history
notebook:a
notebook:q
Metadata in nb
is primarily derived from git, the filesystem, and file
content. For example, displayed timestamps are derived from
git log
, with nb show --added
displaying the datetime of the first commit containing the file and
nb show --updated
displaying the datetime of the last commit in
which the file was modified. Meanwhile, the file system's modified
timestamp is used for sorting.
nb
also uses plain text files to store ids and state information in
git, including
.index
files,
.pindex
files,
and .archived
files.
User-defined metadata can be added to notes in nb
using front
matter. Front matter is a
simple, human accessible, and future-friendly method for defining metadata
fields in plain text and is well supported in tools for working with
Markdown.
Front matter is defined within a Markdown file with triple-dashed lines
(---
) indicating the start and end of the block, with each field represented
by a key name with a colon followed by the value:
---
title: Example Title
author: xwmx
year: 2021
---
Example content.
More example content:
- one
- two
- three
Any metadata can be placed in the front matter block. nb
uses the
title:
field for listing, filtering, and selecting items, if one is
present, and ignores any other fields.
The simple key: value
syntax is suitable for many metadata fields.
More complex data can be defined using additional
YAML
capabilities.
nb
has an interactive shell that can be started with
nb shell
, nb -i
, or nb --interactive
:
$ nb shell
__ _
\ \ _ __ | |__
\ \ | '_ \| '_ \
/ / | | | | |_) |
/_/ |_| |_|_.__/
------------------
nb shell started. Enter ls to list notes and notebooks.
Enter help for usage information. Enter exit to exit.
nb❯ ls
home
----
[3] Example
[2] Sample
[1] Demo
nb❯ edit 3 --content "New content."
Updated: [3] Example
nb❯ bookmark https://example.com
Added: [4] 🔖 example.bookmark.md "Example Title (example.com)"
nb❯ ls
home
----
[4] 🔖 Example Title (example.com)
[3] Example
[2] Sample
[1] Demo
nb❯ bookmark url 4
https://example.com
nb❯ search "example"
[4] example.bookmark.md "Example (example.com)"
-----------------------------------------------
1:# Example (example.com)
3:<https://example.com>
[3] example.md "Example"
------------------------
1:# Example
nb❯ exit
$
The nb
shell recognizes all nb
subcommands and options,
providing a streamlined, distraction-free approach for working with nb
.
Several core nb
subcommands have shortcut aliases to make
them faster to work with:
# `a` (add): add a new note named "example.md"
nb a example.md
# `+` (add): add a new note titled "Example Title"
nb + --title "Example Title"
# `b` (browse): open the folder named "sample" in the web browser
nb b sample/
# `o` (open): open the URL from bookmark 12 in your web browser
nb o 12
# `p` (peek): open the URL from bookmark 6 in your terminal browser
nb p 6
# `e` (edit): edit note 5
nb e 5
# `d` (delete): delete note 19
nb d 19
# `d` (delete): delete note 123 in the notebook named "example:"
nb - example:123
# `s` (show): show note 27
nb s 27
# `q` (search): search notes for "example query"
nb q "example query"
# `h` (help): display the help information for the `add` subcommand
nb h add
# `u` (use): switch to example-notebook
nb u example-notebook
For more commands and options, run
nb help
or
nb help <subcommand>
__ _
\ \ _ __ | |__
\ \ | '_ \| '_ \
/ / | | | | |_) |
/_/ |_| |_|_.__/
[nb] Command line and local web note-taking, bookmarking, and archiving with
plain text data storage, encryption, filtering and search, pinning, #tagging,
Git-backed versioning and syncing, Pandoc-backed conversion, global and local
notebooks, customizable color themes, [[wiki-style linking]], plugins, and more
in a single portable, user-friendly script.
Help:
nb help Display this help information.
nb help <subcommand> View help information for <subcommand>.
nb help --colors View information about color settings.
nb help --readme View the `nb` README file.
Usage:
nb
nb [<ls-options>...] [<id> | <filename> | <path> | <title> | <notebook>]
nb [<url>] [<bookmark options>...]
nb add [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>] [<content>]
[-b | --browse] [-c <content> | --content <content>] [--edit]
[-e | --encrypt] [-f <filename> | --filename <filename>]
[--folder <folder-path>] [--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
[-t <title> | --title <title>] [--type <type>]
nb add bookmark [<bookmark-options>...]
nb add folder [<name>]
nb add todo [<todo-options>...]
nb archive [<notebook>]
nb bookmark [<ls-options>...]
nb bookmark [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/] <url>...
[-c <comment> | --comment <comment>] [--edit] [-e | --encrypt]
[-f <filename> | --filename <filename>] [--no-request]
[-q <quote> | --quote <quote>] [--save-source]
[-r (<url> | <selector>) | --related (<url> | <selector>)]...
[-t <tag1>,<tag2>... | --tags <tag1>,<tag2>...] [--title <title>]
nb bookmark [list [<list-options>...]]
nb bookmark (open | peek | url) (<id> | <filename> | <path> | <title>)
nb bookmark (edit | delete) (<id> | <filename> | <path> | <title>)
nb bookmark search <query>
nb browse [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>] [--daemon]
[-g | --gui] [-n | --notebooks] [-p | --print] [-q | --query <query>]
[-s | --serve] [-t <tag> | --tag <tag> | --tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
nb browse add [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>]
[-c <content> | --content <content>] [--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
[-t <title> | --title <title>]
nb browse delete ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb browse edit ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb completions (check | install [-d | --download] | uninstall)
nb copy ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/]<filename>]
nb count [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/]
nb delete ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])...
[-f | --force]
nb do ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[<task-number>]
nb edit ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[-c <content> | --content <content>] [--edit]
[-e <editor> | --editor <editor>] [--overwrite] [--prepend]
nb export ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
<path> [-f | --force] [<pandoc options>...]
nb export notebook <name> [<path>]
nb export pandoc ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[<pandoc options>...]
nb folders (add | delete) [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/]<folder-name>
nb folders <list-options>...
nb git [checkpoint [<message>] | dirty]
nb git <git-options>...
nb help [<subcommand>] [-p | --print]
nb help [-c | --colors] | [-r | --readme] | [-s | --short] [-p | --print]
nb history [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>]
nb import [copy | download | move] (<path>... | <url>) [--convert]
[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>]
nb import notebook <path> [<name>]
nb init [<remote-url> [<branch>]] [--author] [--email <email>]
[--name <name>]
nb list [-e [<length>] | --excerpt [<length>]] [--filenames]
[-f | --folders-first] [-n <limit> | --limit <limit> | --<limit>]
[--no-id] [--no-indicator] [-p <number> | --page <number>] [--pager]
[--paths] [-s | --sort] [-r | --reverse] [--tags]
[-t <type> | --type <type> | --<type>]
[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <path> | <query>]
nb ls [-a | --all] [-b | --browse] [-e [<length>] | --excerpt [<length>]]
[--filenames] [-f | --folders-first] [-g | --gui]
[-n <limit> | --limit <limit> | --<limit>] [--no-footer] [--no-header]
[--no-id] [--no-indicator] [-p <number> | --page <number>] [--pager]
[--paths] [-s | --sort] [-r | --reverse] [--tags]
[-t <type> | --type <type> | --<type>]
[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <path> | <query>]
nb move ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
([<notebook>:][<path>] | --reset | --to-bookmark | --to-note |
--to-title | --to-todo) [-f | --force]
nb notebooks [<name> | <query>] [--ar | --archived] [--global] [--local]
[--names] [--paths] [--unar | --unarchived]
nb notebooks add ([<name>] [<remote-url> [<branch>... | --all]]) [--author]
[--email <email>] [--name <name>]
nb notebooks (archive | open | peek | status | unarchive) [<name>]
nb notebooks author [<name> | <path>] [--email <email>] [--name <name>]
nb notebooks current [--path | --selected | --filename [<filename>]]
[--global | --local]
nb notebooks delete <name> [-f | --force]
nb notebooks (export <name> [<path>] | import <path>)
nb notebooks init [<path> [<remote-url> [<branch>]]] [--author]
[--email <email>] [--name <name>]
nb notebooks rename <old-name> <new-name>
nb notebooks select <selector>
nb notebooks show (<name> | <path> | <selector>) [--ar | --archived]
[--escaped | --name | --path | --filename [<filename>]]
nb notebooks use <name>
nb open ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb peek ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb pin ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb plugins [<name>] [--paths]
nb plugins install [<path> | <url>] [--force]
nb plugins uninstall <name> [--force]
nb remote [branches [<url>] | remove | rename [<branch-name>] <name>]
nb remote [delete <branch-name> | reset <branch-name>]
nb remote set <url> [<branch-name>]
nb run <command> [<arguments>...]
nb search ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
<query>... [-a | --all] [--and <query>] [--not <query>] [--or <query>]
[-l | --list] [--path] [-t <tag1>,<tag2>... | --tag <tag1>,<tag2>...]
[-t | --tags] [--type <type> | --<type>] [--utility <name>]
nb set [<name> [<value>] | <number> [<value>]]
nb settings [colors [<number> | themes] | edit | list [--long]]
nb settings (get | show | unset) (<name> | <number>)
nb settings set (<name> | <number>) <value>
nb shell [<subcommand> [<options>...] | --clear-history]
nb show ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[[-a | --added] | [--authors] | [-b | --browse] | --filename | --id |
--info-line | --path | [-p | --print] | --relative-path | [-r |
--render] | --title | --type [<type>] | [-u | --updated]] [--no-color]
nb show <notebook>
nb status [<notebook>]
nb subcommands [add <name>...] [alias <name> <alias>]
[describe <name> <usage>]
nb sync [-a | --all]
nb tasks ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[open | closed]
nb todo add [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>] <title>
[--description <description>] [--due <date>]
[-r (<url> | <selector>) | --related (<url> | <selector>)]
[--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...] [--task <title>...]
nb todo do ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[<task-number>]
nb todo undo ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[<task-number>]
nb todos [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/] [open | closed] [--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
nb todos tasks ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[open | closed]
nb unarchive [<notebook>]
nb undo ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[<task-number>]
nb unpin ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb unset (<name> | <number>)
nb update
nb use <notebook>
nb -h | --help | help [<subcommand> | --readme]
nb -i | --interactive [<subcommand> [<options>...]]
nb --no-color
nb --version | version
Subcommands:
(default) List notes and notebooks. This is an alias for `nb ls`.
When a <url> is provided, create a new bookmark.
add Add a note, folder, or file.
archive Archive the current or specified notebook.
bookmark Add, open, list, and search bookmarks.
browse Browse and manage linked items in terminal and GUI web browsers.
completions Install and uninstall completion scripts.
copy Copy or duplicate an item.
count Print the number of items in a notebook or folder.
delete Delete a note.
do Mark a todo or task as done.
edit Edit a note.
export Export a note to a variety of different formats.
folders Add, delete, and list folders.
git Run `git` commands within the current notebook.
help View help information for the program or a subcommand.
history View git history for the current notebook or a note.
import Import a file into the current notebook.
init Initialize the first notebook.
list List notes in the current notebook.
ls List notebooks and notes in the current notebook.
move Move or rename a note.
notebooks Manage notebooks.
open Open a bookmarked web page or notebook folder, or edit a note.
peek View a note, bookmarked web page, or notebook in the terminal.
pin Pin an item so it appears first in lists.
plugins Install and uninstall plugins and themes.
remote Configure the remote URL and branch for the notebook.
run Run shell commands within the current notebook.
search Search notes.
settings Edit configuration settings.
shell Start the `nb` interactive shell.
show Show a note or notebook.
status Run `git status` in the current notebook.
subcommands List, add, alias, and describe subcommands.
status Print notebook status information.
sync Sync local notebook with the remote repository.
tasks List tasks in todos, notebooks, folders, and other items.
todo Manage todos and tasks.
unarchive Unarchive the current or specified notebook.
undo Mark a todo or task as not done.
unpin Unpin a pinned item.
unset Return a setting to its default value.
update Update `nb` to the latest version.
use Switch to a notebook.
version Display version information.
Notebook Usage:
nb <notebook>:[<subcommand>] [<identifier>] [<options>...]
nb <subcommand> <notebook>:<identifier> [<options>...]
Program Options:
-h, --help Display this help information.
-i, --interactive Start the `nb` interactive shell.
--no-color Print without color highlighting.
--version Display version information.
More Information:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb
↑ · See also:
Bookmarks,
bookmark
,
browse
__ __ __
/ /_ ____ ____ / /______ ___ ____ ______/ /__
/ __ \/ __ \/ __ \/ //_/ __ `__ \/ __ `/ ___/ //_/
/ /_/ / /_/ / /_/ / ,< / / / / / / /_/ / / / ,<
/_.___/\____/\____/_/|_/_/ /_/ /_/\__,_/_/ /_/|_|
bookmark -- Command line bookmarking with tagging, encryption,
full-text page content search with regular expression support,
GUI and terminal browser support, and data stored in plain text
Markdown files with Git-backed versioning and syncing.
Usage:
bookmark [<ls-options>...]
bookmark [<notebook>:][<folder-path>] <url>
[-c <comment> | --comment <comment>] [--edit] [-e | --encrypt]
[-f <filename> | --filename <filename>] [--no-request]
[-q <quote> | --quote <quote>] [--save-source]
[-r (<url> | <selector>) | --related (<url> | <selector>)]...
[-t <tag1>,<tag2>... | --tags <tag1>,<tag2>...] [--title <title>]
bookmark (edit | delete | open | peek | url)
([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
bookmark search <query>
Options:
-c, --comment <comment> A comment or description for this bookmark.
--edit Open the bookmark in your editor before saving.
-e, --encrypt Encrypt the bookmark with a password.
-f, --filename <filename> The filename for the bookmark. It is
recommended to omit the extension so the
default bookmark extension is used.
--no-request Don't request or download the target page.
-q, --quote <quote> A quote or excerpt from the saved page.
Alias: `--excerpt`
-r, --related <selector> A selector for an item related to the
bookmarked page.
-r, --related <url> A URL for a page related to the bookmarked page.
Multiple `--related` flags can be used in a
command to save multiple related URLs.
--save-source Save the page source as HTML.
-t, --tags <tag1>,<tag2>... A comma-separated list of tags.
--title <title> The bookmark title. When not specified,
`nb` will use the html <title> tag.
Subcommands:
(default) Add a new bookmark for <url>, or list bookmarks.
Bookmarks can also be added with `nb <url>`
delete Delete a bookmark.
edit Edit a bookmark.
list List bookmarks in the current notebook.
Shortcut Alias: `ls`
open Open the bookmarked page in your system's primary web browser.
Shortcut Alias: `o`
peek Open the bookmarked page in your terminal web browser.
Alias: `preview`
Shortcut Alias: `p`
search Search bookmarks for <query>.
Shortcut Alias: `q`
url Print the URL for the specified bookmark.
Description:
Create, view, search, edit, and delete bookmarks.
By default, the html page content is saved within the bookmark, making the
bookmarked page available for full-text search. When Pandoc [1] is
installed, the HTML content is converted to Markdown before saving.
When readability-cli [2] is install, markup is cleaned up to focus on
content.
`peek` opens the page in `w3m` [3] or `links` [4] when available.
To specify a preferred browser, set the `$BROWSER` environment variable
in your .bashrc, .zshrc, or equivalent, e.g.: export BROWSER="lynx"
Bookmarks are identified by the `.bookmark.md` file extension. The
bookmark URL is the first URL in the file within "<" and ">" characters:
<https://www.example.com>
1. https://pandoc.org/
2. https://gitlab.com/gardenappl/readability-cli
3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W3m
4. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Links_(web_browser)
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-bookmarks
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help open
nb help peek
nb help show
Examples:
bookmark https://example.com
bookmark https://example.com --encrypt
bookmark https://example.com --tags example,sample,demo
bookmark https://example.com/about -c "Example comment."
bookmark https://example.com/faqs -f example-filename
bookmark https://example.com --quote "Example quote or excerpt."
bookmark list
bookmark search "example query"
bookmark open 5
------------------------------------------
Part of `nb` (https://github.com/xwmx/nb).
For more information, see: `nb help`.
↑ · See also:
Adding,
bookmark
,
browse
,
delete
,
edit
,
folders
,
import
,
show
,
todo
Usage:
nb add [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>] [<content>]
[-b | --browse] [-c <content> | --content <content>] [--edit]
[-e | --encrypt] [-f <filename> | --filename <filename>]
[--folder <folder-path>] [--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
[-t <title> | --title <title>] [--type <type>]
nb add bookmark [<bookmark-options>...]
nb add folder [<name>]
nb add todo [<todo-options>...]
Options:
-b, --browse Add using a terminal or GUI web browser.
-c, --content <content> The content for the new note.
--edit Open the note in the editor before saving when
content is piped or passed as an argument.
-e, --encrypt Encrypt the note with a password.
-f, --filename <filename> The filename for the new note.
--folder <folder-path> Add within the folder located at <folder-path>.
--tags <tag1>,<tag2>... A comma-separated list of tags.
-t, --title <title> The title for a new note. If `--title` is
present, the filename is derived from the
title, unless `--filename` is specified.
--type <type> The file type for the new note, as a file
extension.
Description:
Create a new note or folder.
If no arguments are passed, a new blank note file is opened with `$EDITOR`,
currently set to: example
If a non-option argument is passed, `nb` will treat it as a <filename≥
if a file extension is found. If no file extension is found, `nb` will
treat the string as <content> and will create a new note without opening the
editor. `nb add` can also create a new note with piped content.
`nb` creates Markdown files by default. To create a note with a
different file type, use the extension in the filename or use the `--type`
option. To change the default file type, use `nb set default_extension`.
When the `-e` / `--encrypt` option is used, `nb` will encrypt the
note with AES-256 using OpenSSL by default, or GPG, if configured in
`nb set encryption_tool`.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#adding
See Also:
nb help bookmark
nb help browse
nb help delete
nb help edit
nb help folders
nb help import
nb help show
nb help todo
Examples:
nb add
nb add example.md
nb add "Note content."
nb add example.md --title "Example Title" --content "Example content."
echo "Note content." | nb add
nb add -t "Secret Document" --encrypt
nb add example/document.md
nb add folder sample/demo
nb example:add
nb example:add -t "Title"
nb a
nb a "Note content."
nb example:a
nb example:a -t "Title"
Aliases:
nb create
nb new
Shortcut Aliases:
nb a
nb +
↑ · See also:
Archiving Notebooks,
notebooks
,
status
,
unarchive
Usage:
nb archive [<name>]
Description:
Set the current notebook or notebook <name> to "archived" status.
This is an alias for `nb notebooks archive`.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#archiving-notebooks
See Also:
nb help notebooks
nb help status
nb help unarchive
Examples:
nb archive
nb archive example
Shortcut Alias:
nb ar
↑ · See also:
Bookmarks,
browse
,
open
,
peek
,
show
Usage:
nb bookmark [<ls-options>...]
nb bookmark [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/] <url>...
[-c <comment> | --comment <comment>] [--edit] [-e | --encrypt]
[-f <filename> | --filename <filename>] [--no-request]
[-q <quote> | --quote <quote>] [--save-source]
[-r (<url> | <selector>) | --related (<url> | <selector>)]...
[-t <tag1>,<tag2>... | --tags <tag1>,<tag2>...] [--title <title>]
nb bookmark list [<list-options>...]
nb bookmark (edit | delete | open | peek | url)
([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb bookmark search <query>
Options:
-c, --comment <comment> A comment or description for this bookmark.
--edit Open the bookmark in your editor before saving.
-e, --encrypt Encrypt the bookmark with a password.
-f, --filename <filename> The filename for the bookmark. It is
recommended to omit the extension so the
default bookmark extension is used.
--no-request Don't request or download the target page.
-q, --quote <quote> A quote or excerpt from the saved page.
Alias: `--excerpt`
-r, --related <selector> A selector for an item related to the
bookmarked page.
-r, --related <url> A URL for a page related to the bookmarked page.
Multiple `--related` flags can be used in a
command to save multiple related URLs.
--save-source Save the page source as HTML.
-t, --tags <tag1>,<tag2>... A comma-separated list of tags.
--title <title> The bookmark title. When not specified,
`nb` will use the html <title> tag.
Subcommands:
(default) Add a new bookmark for <url>, or list bookmarks.
Bookmarks can also be added with `nb <url>`
delete Delete a bookmark.
edit Edit a bookmark.
list List bookmarks in the current notebook.
Shortcut Alias: `ls`
open Open the bookmarked page in your system's primary web browser.
Shortcut Alias: `o`
peek Open the bookmarked page in your terminal web browser.
Alias: `preview`
Shortcut Alias: `p`
search Search bookmarks for <query>.
Shortcut Alias: `q`
url Print the URL for the specified bookmark.
Description:
Create, view, search, edit, and delete bookmarks.
By default, the html page content is saved within the bookmark, making the
bookmarked page available for full-text search. When Pandoc [1] is
installed, the HTML content is converted to Markdown before saving.
When readability-cli [2] is install, markup is cleaned up to focus on
content.
`peek` opens the page in `w3m` [3] or `links` [4] when available.
To specify a preferred browser, set the `$BROWSER` environment variable
in your .bashrc, .zshrc, or equivalent, e.g.: export BROWSER="lynx"
Bookmarks are identified by the `.bookmark.md` file extension. The
bookmark URL is the first URL in the file within "<" and ">" characters:
<https://www.example.com>
1. https://pandoc.org/
2. https://gitlab.com/gardenappl/readability-cli
3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W3m
4. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Links_(web_browser)
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-bookmarks
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help open
nb help peek
nb help show
Examples:
nb https://example.com
nb example: https://example.com
nb https://example.com --encrypt
nb https://example.com --tags example,sample,demo
nb https://example.com/about -c "Example comment."
nb https://example.com/faqs -f example-filename
nb https://example.com --quote "Example quote or excerpt."
nb bookmark list
nb bookmark search "example query"
nb bookmark open 5
nb bk
Shortcut Aliases:
nb bk
nb bm
↑ · See also:
Browsing,
Images,
Linking,
add
,
delete
,
edit
,
list
,
ls
,
open
,
peek
,
pin
,
search
,
show
Usage:
nb browse [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>] [--daemon]
[-g | --gui] [-n | --notebooks] [-p | --print] [-q | --query <query>]
[-s | --serve] [-t <tag> | --tag <tag> | --tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
nb browse add [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>]
[-c <content> | --content <content>] [--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
[-t <title> | --title <title>]
nb browse delete ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb browse edit ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
Subcommands:
(default) Open a notebook, folder, or item in the terminal or GUI web browser.
add Open the add view in the browser.
Shortcut Aliases: `a`, `+`
delete Open the delete view in the browser.
Shortcut Aliases: `d`, `-`
edit Open the edit view in the browser.
Shortcut Alias: `e`
Options:
-c, --content <content> Add content to the new note.
--daemon Start the web server. Close with <CTRL-C>.
-g, --gui Open in the system's primary GUI web browser.
-n, --notebooks Browse notebooks.
-p, --print Print to standard output.
-q, --query <query> Open to the search results for <query>.
-s, --serve Start the web server. Close with any key.
-t, --tag <tag> Search for a tag.
--tags <tag1>,<tag2>... A comma-separated list of tags.
-t, --title <title> Add a title to the new note.
Description:
Browse, view, and edit linked notes, bookmarks, notebooks, folders, and
other items using terminal and GUI web browsers.
`browse` includes an embedded web application designed for terminal
and GUI web browsers that renders [[wiki-style links]] and #tags as
internal links, providing the ability to browse notes and notebooks,
as well as seamlessly browse to and from the offsite links in
bookmarks and notes.
To link to a note or bookmark from another, include the selector for the
target item within double square brackets anywhere in the linking document:
# link to item 123 in the "sample" folder in the "example" notebook
[[example:sample/123]]
# link to the item titled "Example Title" in the "demo" notebook
[[demo:Example Title]]
`browse` supports `w3m` [1] and `links` [2], and depends on
`ncat` [3] or `socat` [4] and `pandoc` [5]:
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W3m
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Links_(web_browser)
3. https://nmap.org/ncat/
4. https://www.kali.org/tools/socat/
5. https://pandoc.org/
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-browsing
See Also:
nb help add
nb help delete
nb help edit
nb help list
nb help ls
nb help open
nb help peek
nb help pin
nb help search
nb help show
nb help unpin
Examples:
nb browse
nb browse example:
nb browse Example\ Folder/
nb browse 123
nb browse demo:456
nb br
Shortcut Alias:
nb b
↑ · See also:
Tab Completion,
env
Usage:
nb completions (check | install [-d | --download] | uninstall)
Options:
-d, --download Download the completion scripts and install.
Description:
Manage completion scripts.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/etc/README.md
See Also:
nb help env
↑ · See also:
Moving & Renaming,
move
Usage:
nb copy ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/]<filename>]
Description:
Copy or duplicate an item.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-moving--renaming
See Also:
nb help move
Examples:
nb copy 321
nb copy 456 example:
nb copy sample/demo.md
Alias:
nb duplicate
Usage:
nb count [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/]
Description:
Print the number of items in the first level of the current notebook,
<notebook>, or the folder at <folder-path>.
↑ · See also:
Deleting,
add
,
browse
,
edit
,
move
,
show
Usage:
nb delete ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])...
[-f | --force]
Options:
-f, --force Skip the confirmation prompt.
Description:
Delete one or more items.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#deleting
See Also:
nb help add
nb help browse
nb help edit
nb help move
nb help show
Examples:
nb delete 3
nb delete example.md
nb delete "A Document Title"
nb 3 delete --force
nb example:delete 12
nb delete example:12
nb example:12 delete
nb d 3
nb 3 d
nb d example:12
nb example:12 d
Aliases:
nb rm
nb trash
Shortcut Aliases:
nb d
nb -
↑ · See also:
Todos,
Tasks,
tasks
,
todo
,
undo
Usage:
nb do ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[<task-number>]
Description:
Mark a todo or task as done.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-todos
See Also:
nb help tasks
nb help todo
nb help undo
Examples:
nb do 123
nb do example:sample/321
nb do 543 7
↑ · See also:
Editing,
add
,
browse
,
delete
,
move
,
show
Usage:
nb edit ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[-c <content> | --content <content>] [--edit]
[-e <editor> | --editor <editor>] [--overwrite] [--prepend]
Options:
-c, --content <content> Content to add to the item.
--edit Open the note in the editor before saving when
content is piped or passed as an argument.
-e, --editor <editor> Edit the note with <editor>, overriding the editor
specified in the `$EDITOR` environment variable.
--overwrite Overwrite existing content with <content> and
standard input.
--prepend Prepend <content> and standard input before
existing content.
Description:
Open the specified note in `$EDITOR` or <editor> if specified.
Content piped to `nb edit` or passed using the `--content` option
is appended to the file without opening it in the editor,
unless the `--edit` flag is specified.
Non-text files are opened in your system's preferred app or program for
that file type.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#editing
See Also:
nb help add
nb help browse
nb help delete
nb help move
nb help show
Examples:
nb edit 3
nb edit example.md
nb edit "A Document Title"
echo "Content to append." | nb edit 1
nb 3 edit
nb example:edit 12
nb edit example:12
nb example:12 edit
nb e 3
nb 3 e
nb e example:12
nb example:12 e
Shortcut Alias:
nb e
↑ · See also:
Installation,
completions
,
init
,
update
,
version
Usage:
nb env [install]
Subcommands:
install Install dependencies on supported systems.
Description:
Print program environment and configuration information, or install
dependencies.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#installation
See Also:
nb help completions
nb help init
nb help update
nb help version
↑ · See also:
Import / Export,
browse
,
import
Usage:
nb export ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
<path> [-f | --force] [<pandoc options>...]
nb export notebook <name> [<path>]
nb export pandoc ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[<pandoc options>...]
Options:
-f, --force Skip the confirmation prompt when overwriting an existing file.
Subcommands:
(default) Export a file to <path>. If <path> has a different extension
than the source note, convert the note using `pandoc`.
notebook Export the notebook <name> to the current directory or <path>.
Alias for `nb notebooks export`.
pandoc Export the file to standard output or a file using `pandoc`.
`export pandoc` prints to standard output by default.
Description:
Export a file or notebook.
If Pandoc [1] is available, convert the note from its current format
to the format of the output file as indicated by the file extension
in <path>. Any additional arguments are passed directly to Pandoc.
See the Pandoc help information for available options.
1. https://pandoc.org/
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#%EF%B8%8F-import--export
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help import
Examples:
# Export an Org note
nb export example.org /path/to/example.org
# Export a Markdown note to HTML and print to standard output
nb export pandoc example.md --from=markdown_strict --to=html
# Export a Markdown note to a .docx Microsoft Office Word document
nb export example.md /path/to/example.docx
# Export note 12 in the "sample" notebook to HTML
nb export sample:12 /path/to/example.html
↑ · See also:
Folders,
add
,
delete
,
list
,
ls
Usage:
nb folders add [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/]<folder-name>
nb folders delete [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/]<folder-name>
nb folders <list-options>...
Subcommands:
(default) List folders.
add Add a new folder.
delete Delete a folder.
Description:
Add, delete, and list folders.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-folders
See Also:
nb help add
nb help delete
nb help list
nb help ls
Examples:
nb folders
nb folders add example
nb folders delete example:sample
Alias:
nb folder
Shortcut Alias:
nb f
↑ · See also:
Git Sync,
History,
history
,
remote
,
run
,
status
,
sync
Usage:
nb git [checkpoint [<message>] | dirty]
nb git <git-options>...
Subcommands:
checkpoint Create a new git commit in the current notebook and sync with
the remote if `nb set auto_sync` is enabled.
dirty 0 (success, true) if there are uncommitted changes in the
current notebook. 1 (error, false) if the notebook is clean.
Description:
Run `git` commands within the current notebook directory.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-git-sync
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-revision-history
See Also:
nb help history
nb help remote
nb help run
nb help status
nb help sync
Examples:
nb git status
nb git diff
nb git log
nb example:git status
Usage:
nb help [<subcommand>] [-p | --print]
nb help [-c | --colors] | [-r | --readme] | [-s | --short] [-p | --print]
Options:
-c, --colors View information about color themes and color settings.
-p, --print Print to standard output / terminal.
-r, --readme View the `nb` README file.
-s, --short Print shorter help without subcommand descriptions.
Description:
Print the program help information. When a subcommand name is passed, print
the help information for the subcommand.
Examples:
nb help
nb help add
nb help import
nb h notebooks
nb h e
Shortcut Alias:
nb h
↑ · See also:
History,
Git Sync,
git
,
remote
,
status
,
sync
Usage:
nb history [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>]
Description:
Display notebook history using `tig` [1] (if available) or `git log`.
When a note is specified, the history for that note is displayed.
1. https://github.com/jonas/tig
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-revision-history
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-git-sync
See Also:
nb help git
nb help remote
nb help status
nb help sync
Examples:
nb history
nb history example.md
nb 3 history
nb history example:
nb example:history
nb example:history 12
nb history example:12
nb example:12 history
↑ · See also:
Import / Export,
Images,
add
,
export
Usage:
nb import [copy | download | move] (<path>... | <url>) [--convert]
[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>]
nb import notebook <path> [<name>]
Options:
--convert Convert HTML content to Markdown.
Subcommands:
(default) Copy or download the file(s) at <path> or <url>.
copy Copy the file(s) at <path> into the current notebook.
download Download the file at <url> into the current notebook.
move Move the file(s) at <path> into the current notebook.
notebook Import the local notebook at <path> to make it global.
Description:
Copy, move, or download files into the current notebook or import
a local notebook to make it global.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#%EF%B8%8F-import--export
See Also:
nb help add
nb help export
Examples:
nb import ~/Pictures/example.png
nb import ~/Documents/example.docx
nb import https://example.com/example.pdf
nb example:import https://example.com/example.jpg
nb import ./*
nb import ./*.md
nb import ~/Pictures/example.png example-notebook:
nb import ~/Documents/example.docx example-folder/
Shortcut Alias:
nb i
Usage:
nb init [<remote-url> [<branch>]] [--author] [--email <email>]
[--name <name>]
Options:
--author Display the local email and name config prompt.
--email <email> Set the local commit author email address to <email>.
--name <name> Set the local commit author name to <name>.
Description:
Initialize the initial "home" notebook and generate a configuration file at:
~/.nbrc
Pass optional <remote-url> and <branch> arguments to create the initial
"home" notebook using a clone of an existing notebook.
See Also:
nb help notebooks
Examples:
nb init
nb init https://github.com/example/example.git
nb init https://github.com/example/example.git example-branch
↑ · See also:
Listing & Filtering,
browse
,
ls
,
pin
,
search
,
unpin
Usage:
nb list [-e [<length>] | --excerpt [<length>]] [--filenames]
[-f | --folders-first] [-n <limit> | --limit <limit> | --<limit>]
[--no-id] [--no-indicator] [-p <number> | --page <number>] [--pager]
[--paths] [-s | --sort] [-r | --reverse] [--tags]
[-t <type> | --type <type> | --<type>]
[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <path> | <query>]
Options:
-e, --excerpt [<length>] Print an excerpt <length> lines long under
each note's filename [default: 3].
--filenames Print the filename for each note.
-f, --folders-first Print folders before other items.
-n, --limit <limit>, --<limit> The maximum number of notes to list.
--no-id Don't include the id in list items.
--no-indicator Don't include the indicator in list items.
-p, --page <number> The page to view in the list paginated by
a <limit> option or `nb set limit`.
--pager Display output in the pager.
--paths Print the full path to each item.
-s, --sort Order notes by id.
-r, --reverse List items in reverse order.
--tags List tags in the notebook or folder.
-t, --type <type>, --<type> List items of <type>. <type> can be a file
extension or one of the following types:
archive, audio, book, bookmark, document,
folder, image, note, text, video
Description:
List notes in the current notebook.
When <id>, <filename>, <path>, or <title> are present, the listing for the
matching note is displayed. When no match is found, titles and filenames
are searched for any that match <query> as a case-insensitive regular
expression.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#listing--filtering
Indicators:
🔉 Audio
📖 Book
🔖 Bookmark
🔒 Encrypted
📂 Folder
🌄 Image
📄 PDF, Word, or Open Office document
📹 Video
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help ls
nb help pin
nb help search
nb help unpin
Examples:
nb list
nb list example.md -e 10
nb list --excerpt --no-id
nb list --filenames --reverse
nb list "^Example.*"
nb list --10
nb list --type document
nb example:list
↑ · See also:
Listing & Filtering,
browse
,
list
,
pin
,
search
,
unpin
Usage:
nb ls [-a | --all] [-b | --browse] [-e [<length>] | --excerpt [<length>]]
[--filenames] [-f | --folders-first] [-g | --gui]
[-n <limit> | --limit <limit> | --<limit>] [--no-footer] [--no-header]
[--no-id] [--no-indicator] [-p <number> | --page <number>] [--pager]
[--paths] [-s | --sort] [-r | --reverse] [--tags]
[-t <type> | --type <type> | --<type>]
[<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <path> | <query>]
Options:
-a, --all Print all items in the notebook. Equivalent
to no limit.
-b, --browse Open the specified item or current notebook
with `browse` in a terminal web browser.
-e, --excerpt [<length>] Print an excerpt <length> lines long under
each note's filename [default: 3].
--filenames Print the filename for each note.
-f, --folders-first Print folders before other items.
-g, --gui Open the specified item or current notebook
with `browse` in a GUI web browser.
-n, --limit <limit>, --<limit> The maximum number of listed items.
[default: 15]
--no-footer Print without footer.
--no-header Print without header.
--no-id Don't include the id in list items.
--no-indicator Don't include the indicator in list items.
-p, --page <number> The page to view in the list paginated by
a <limit> option or `nb set limit`.
--pager Display output in the pager.
--paths Print the full path to each item.
-s, --sort Order notes by id.
-r, --reverse List items in reverse order.
--tags List tags in the notebook or folder.
-t, --type <type>, --<type> List items of <type>. <type> can be a file
extension or one of the following types:
archive, audio, book, bookmark, document,
folder, image, note, text, video
Description:
List notebooks and notes in the current notebook, displaying note titles
when available. `nb ls` is a combination of `nb notebooks` and
`nb list` in one view.
When <id>, <filename>, <path>, or <title> are present, the listing for the
matching note is displayed. When no match is found, titles and filenames
are searched for any that match <query> as a case-insensitive regular
expression.
Options are passed through to `list`. For more information, see
`nb help list`.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#listing--filtering
Indicators:
🔉 Audio
📖 Book
🔖 Bookmark
🔒 Encrypted
📂 Folder
🌄 Image
📄 PDF, Word, or Open Office document
📹 Video
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help list
nb help pin
nb help search
nb help unpin
Examples:
nb
nb --all
nb ls
nb ls example.md -e 10
nb ls --excerpt --no-id
nb ls --reverse
nb ls "^Example.*"
nb ls --10
nb ls --type document
nb example:
nb example: -ae
nb example:ls
Shortcut Alias:
nb
↑ · See also:
Moving & Renaming,
copy
,
delete
,
edit
Usage:
nb move ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
([<notebook>:][<path>] | --reset | --to-bookmark | --to-note |
--to-title | --to-todo) [-f | --force]
Options:
-f, --force Skip the confirmation prompt.
--reset Reset the filename to the last modified timestamp.
--to-bookmark Preserve the existing filename and replace the extension
with ".bookmark.md" to convert the note to a bookmark.
--to-note Preserve the existing filename and replace the bookmark's
".bookmark.md" extension with ".md" to convert the bookmark
to a Markdown note.
--to-title Set the filename to the note title, lowercased with spaces
and disallowed filename characters replaced with underscores.
--to-todo Preserve the existing filename and replace the extension
with ".todo.md" to convert the note to a todo.
Description:
Move or rename a note. Move the note to <path> or change the file type.
When the file extension is omitted, the existing extension is used.
When only a file extension is specified, only the extension will be updated.
`nb move` and `nb rename` are aliases and can be used interchangeably.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-moving--renaming
See Also:
nb help copy
nb help delete
nb help edit
Examples:
# move "example.md" to "sample.org"
nb move example.md sample.org
# rename note 3 ("example.md") to "New Name.md"
nb rename 3 "New Name"
# rename "example.bookmark.md" to "New Name.bookmark.md"
nb move example.bookmark.md "New Name"
# rename note 3 ("example.md") to a bookmark named "example.bookmark.md"
nb rename 3 --to-bookmark
# move note 12 into "Sample Folder" in the "demo" notebook
nb move example:12 demo:Sample\ Folder/
# rename note 12 in the "example" notebook to "sample.md"
nb rename example:12 "sample.md"
# change the file extension of note 5 to .org
nb rename 5 .org
Alias:
nb rename
Shortcut Alias:
nb mv
↑ · See also:
Notebooks,
archive
,
history
,
move
,
remote
,
status
,
sync
,
unarchive
,
use
Usage:
nb notebooks [<name> | <query>] [--ar | --archived] [--global] [--local]
[--names] [--paths] [--unar | --unarchived]
nb notebooks add ([<name>] [<remote-url> [<branch>... | --all]]) [--author]
[--email <email>] [--name <name>]
nb notebooks (archive | open | peek | status | unarchive) [<name>]
nb notebooks author [<name> | <path>] [--email <email>] [--name <name>]
nb notebooks current [--path | --selected | --filename [<filename>]]
[--global | --local]
nb notebooks delete <name> [-f | --force]
nb notebooks (export <name> [<path>] | import <path>)
nb notebooks init [<path> [<remote-url> [<branch>]]] [--author]
[--email <email>] [--name <name>]
nb notebooks rename <old-name> <new-name>
nb notebooks select <selector>
nb notebooks show (<name> | <path> | <selector>) [--ar | --archived]
[--escaped | --name | --path | --filename [<filename>]]
nb notebooks use <name>
Options:
--all Add notebooks from all remote branches.
--ar, --archived List archived notebooks, or return archival status
with `show`.
--author Set the notebook's commit author email and name.
--email <email> Set the notebook's commit author email to <email>.
--escaped Print the notebook name with spaces escaped.
--filename [<filename>] Print an available filename for the notebooks. When
<filename> is provided, check for an existing file
and provide a filename with an appended sequence
number for uniqueness.
-f, --force Skip the confirmation prompt.
--global List global notebooks or the notebook set globally
with `use`.
--local Exit with 0 if current within a local notebook,
otherwise exit with 1.
--name, --names Print the notebook name.
--name <name> Set the notebook's commit author name to <name>.
--path, --paths Print the notebook path.
--selected Exit with 0 if the current notebook differs from
the current global notebook, otherwise exit with 1.
--unar, --unarchived Only list unarchived notebooks.
Subcommands:
(default) List notebooks.
add Create a new global notebook. When <remote-url> is specified,
create one or more new global notebook by cloning selected
or specified <branch>es from <remote-url>.
Aliases: `nb notebooks create`, `nb notebooks new`
archive Set the current notebook or notebook <name> to "archived" status.
author Configure the commit author email and name for the notebook.
current Print the current notebook name or path.
delete Delete a notebook.
export Export the notebook <name> to the current directory or <path>,
making it usable as a local notebook.
import Import the local notebook at <path> to make it global.
init Create a new local notebook. Specify a <path> or omit to
initialize the current working directory as a local notebook.
Specify <remote-url> to clone an existing notebook.
open Open the current notebook directory or notebook <name> in the
file browser, explorer, or finder.
Shortcut Alias: `o`
peek Open the current notebook directory or notebook <name> in the
first tool found in the following list:
`ranger` [1], `mc` [2], `vifm` [3], `joshuto` [4], `lsd` [5],
`eza` [6], or `ls`.
Shortcut Alias: `p`
rename Rename a notebook. Aliases: `move`, `mv`
select Set the current notebook from a colon-prefixed selector.
Not persisted. Selection format: <notebook>:<identifier>
status Print the archival status of the current notebook or
notebook <name>.
show Show and return information about a specified notebook.
unarchive Remove "archived" status from the current notebook or notebook <name>.
use Switch to a notebook.
1. https://ranger.github.io/
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midnight_Commander
3. https://vifm.info/
4. https://github.com/kamiyaa/joshuto
5. https://github.com/lsd-rs/lsd
6. https://github.com/eza-community/eza
Description:
Manage notebooks.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-notebooks
See Also:
nb help archive
nb help history
nb help move
nb help remote
nb help status
nb help sync
nb help unarchive
nb help use
Examples:
nb notebooks --names
nb notebooks add sample
nb notebooks add example https://github.com/example/example.git
nb nb current --path
nb nb archive example
Shortcut Aliases:
nb n
nb nb
↑ · See also:
Viewing Bookmarks,
Images,
bookmark
,
browse
,
peek
,
show
Usage:
nb open ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
Description:
Open an item or notebook. When the item is a bookmark, open the bookmarked
page in your system's primary web browser. When the item is in a text format
or any other file type, `open` is the equivalent of `edit`. `open`
with a notebook opens the notebook folder in the system's file browser.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#viewing-bookmarks
See also:
nb help bookmark
nb help browse
nb help peek
nb help show
Examples:
nb open 3
nb open example.bookmark.md
nb 3 open
nb example:open 12
nb open example:12
nb example:12 open
nb o 3
nb 3 o
nb o example:12
nb example:12 o
Shortcut Alias:
nb o
↑ · See also:
Viewing Bookmarks,
bookmark
,
browse
,
open
,
show
Usage:
nb peek ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
Description:
View an item or notebook in the terminal. When the item is a bookmark, view
the bookmarked page in your terminal web browser. When the note is in a text
format or any other file type, `peek` is the equivalent of `show`. When
used with a notebook, `peek` opens the notebook folder first tool found in
the following list: `ranger` [1], `mc` [2], `vifm` [3], `joshuto` [4],
`lsd` [5], eza` [6], or `ls`.
1. https://ranger.github.io/
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midnight_Commander
3. https://vifm.info/
4. https://github.com/kamiyaa/joshuto
5. https://github.com/lsd-rs/lsd
6. https://github.com/eza-community/eza
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#viewing-bookmarks
See also:
nb help bookmark
nb help browse
nb help open
nb help show
Examples:
nb peek 3
nb peek example.bookmark.md
nb 3 peek
nb example:peek 12
nb peek example:12
nb example:12 peek
nb p 3
nb 3 p
nb p example:12
nb example:12 p
Alias:
nb preview
Shortcut Alias:
nb p
↑ · See also:
Pinning,
browse
,
list
,
ls
,
unpin
Usage:
nb pin ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
Description:
Pin an item so it appears first in lists.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-pinning
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help list
nb help ls
nb help unpin
Examples:
nb pin 123
nb pin example:sample/321
↑ · See also:
Plugins,
Plugin Help,
subcommands
Usage:
nb plugins [<name>] [--paths] [--force]
nb plugins install [<path> | <url>] [--force]
nb plugins uninstall <name>
Options:
--paths Print the full path to each plugin.
Subcommands:
(default) List plugins.
install Install a plugin from a <path> or <url>.
uninstall Uninstall the specified plugin.
Description:
Manage plugins and themes.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-plugins
Plugin Extensions:
.nb-theme Plugins defining color themes.
.nb-plugin Plugins defining new subcommands and functionality.
See Also:
nb help subcommands
Alias:
nb plugin
↑ · See also:
Git Sync,
History,
history
,
notebooks
,
status
,
sync
Usage:
nb remote
nb remote branches [<url>]
nb remote delete <branch-name>
nb remote remove
nb remote rename [<branch-name>] <name>
nb remote reset <branch-name>
nb remote set <url> [<branch-name>]
Subcommands:
(default) Print the remote URL and branch for the notebook.
branches List branches on the current or given remote.
delete Delete <branch-name> from the remote.
Caveat: only orphan branches can be deleted.
remove Remove the remote URL from the notebook.
Alias: `unset`
rename Rename the current orphan branch or <branch-name> to <name>.
Caveat: only orphan branches can be renamed.
reset Reset <branch-name> on the remote to a blank initial state.
set Set the remote URL and branch for the notebook.
Description:
Configure the remote repository URL and branch for the current notebook.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-git-sync
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-revision-history
See Also:
nb help history
nb help notebooks
nb help status
nb help sync
Examples:
nb remote set https://github.com/example/example.git
nb remote remove
nb example-notebook:remote set https://github.com/example/example.git
Usage:
nb run <command> [<arguments>...]
Description:
Run shell commands within the current notebook directory.
See Also:
nb help git
nb help shell
Examples:
nb run ls -la
nb run find . -name 'example*'
nb run rg example
↑ · See also:
Search,
browse
,
list
,
ls
Usage:
nb search ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
<query>... [-a | --all] [--and <query>] [--not <query>] [--or <query>]
[-l | --list] [--path] [-t <tag1>,<tag2>... | --tag <tag1>,<tag2>...]
[-t | --tags] [--type <type> | --<type>] [--utility <name>]
Options:
-a, --all Search all unarchived notebooks.
--and <query> Add a AND query.
-l, --list Print the id, filename, and title listing for
each matching file, without the excerpt.
--not <query> Add a NOT query.
--or <query> Add an OR query.
--path Print the full path for each matching file.
-t, --tag <tag1>,<tag2>... A comma-separated list of tags.
-t, --tags List all tags found in the notebook.
--type <type>, --<type> Search items of <type>. <type> can be a file
extension or one of the following types:
note, bookmark, document, archive, image,
video, audio, folder, text
--utility <name> The name of the search utility to search with.
Description:
Perform a full text search.
Multiple query arguments are treated as AND queries, returning items that
match all queries. AND queries can also be specified with the --and <query>
option. The --or <query> option can be used to specify an OR query,
returning items that match at least one of the queries. --not <query>
excludes items matching <query>.
`nb search` is powered by Git's built-in `git grep` tool. `nb` also
supports performing searches with alternative search tools using the
--utility <name> option.
Supported alternative search tools:
1. `rga` https://github.com/phiresky/ripgrep-all
2. `rg` https://github.com/BurntSushi/ripgrep
3. `ag` https://github.com/ggreer/the_silver_searcher
4. `ack` https://beyondgrep.com/
5. `grep` https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grep
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-search
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help list
nb help ls
Examples:
# search current notebook for "example query"
nb search "example query"
# search the notebook "example" for "example query"
nb search example: "example query"
# search all notebooks for "example query" and list matching items
nb search "example query" --all --list
# search for items matching "Example" AND "Demo"
nb search "Example" "Demo"
nb search "Example" --and "Demo"
# search for items matching "Example" OR "Sample"
nb search "Example|Sample"
nb search "Example" --or "Sample"
# search for items matching both "Example" AND "Sample", and NOT "Demo"
nb search "Example" --and "Sample" --not "Demo"
# search with a regular expression
nb search "\d\d\d-\d\d\d\d"
# search for tags
nb search --tag tag1 -t tag2
# search the current notebook for "example query"
nb q "example query"
# search all notebooks for "example query" and list matching items
nb q -la "example query"
Shortcut Alias:
nb q
↑ · See also:
set
& settings
,
Variables,
unset
Usage:
nb set [<name> [<value>] | <number> [<value>]]
nb settings colors [<number> | themes]
nb settings edit
nb settings get (<name> | <number>)
nb settings list [--long]
nb settings set (<name> | <number>) <value>
nb settings show (<name> | <number>)
nb settings unset (<name> | <number>)
Subcommands:
(default) Open the settings prompt, to <name> or <number>, if present.
When <value> is also present, assign <value> to the setting.
colors Print a table of available colors and their xterm color numbers.
When <number> is provided, print the number in its color.
`settings colors themes` prints a list of installed themes.
edit Open the `nb` configuration file in `$EDITOR`.
get Print the value of a setting.
list List information about available settings.
set Assign <value> to a setting.
show Print the help information and current value of a setting.
unset Unset a setting, returning it to the default value.
Description:
Configure `nb`. Use `nb settings set` to customize a setting and
`nb settings unset` to restore the default for a setting.
Use the `nb set` alias to quickly assign values to settings:
nb set color_theme blacklight
nb set limit 40
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#%EF%B8%8F-set--settings
See Also:
nb help unset
Examples:
nb settings
nb set 5 "org"
nb set color_primary 105
nb set unset color_primary
nb set color_secondary unset
nb settings colors
nb settings colors 105
nb set limit 15
Alias:
nb set
[1] auto_sync
---------
By default, operations that trigger a git commit like `add`, `edit`,
and `delete` will sync notebook changes to the remote repository, if
one is set. To disable this behavior, set this to "0".
• Default Value: 1
↑ · See also: Color Themes, Custom Color Themes
[2] color_primary
-------------
The primary color used to highlight identifiers and messages.
• Supported Values: xterm color numbers 0 through 255.
• Default Value: 68 (blue) for 256 color terminals,
4 (blue) for 8 color terminals.
↑ · See also: Color Themes, Custom Color Themes
[3] color_secondary
---------------
The color used for lines and footer elements.
• Supported Values: xterm color numbers 0 through 255.
• Default Value: 8
↑ · See also: Color Themes
[4] color_theme
-----------
The color theme.
To view screenshots of the built-in themes, visit:
https://git.io/nb-docs-color-themes
`nb` supports custom, user-defined themes. To learn more, run:
nb help --colors
To change the syntax highlighting theme, use:
nb set syntax_theme
• Available themes:
blacklight
console
desert
electro
forest
nb
ocean
raspberry
smoke
unicorn
utility
• Default Value: nb
[5] default_extension
-----------------
The default extension to use for note files. Change to "org" for
Org files, "rst" for reStructuredText, "txt" for plain text, or
whatever you prefer.
• Default Value: md
[6] editor
------
The command line text editor used by `nb`.
• Example Values:
atom
code
emacs
hx
macdown
mate
micro
nano
pico
subl
vi
vim
↑ · See also: Password-Protected Encrypted Notes and Bookmarks
[7] encryption_tool
---------------
The tool used for encrypting notes.
• Supported Values: openssl, gpg
• Default Value: openssl
↑ · See also: Listing & Filtering
[8] footer
------
By default, `nb` and `nb ls` include a footer with example commands.
To hide this footer, set this to "0".
• Default Value: 1
↑ · See also: Listing & Filtering
[9] header
------
By default, `nb` and `nb ls` include a header listing available notebooks.
Set the alignment, or hide the header with "0".
• Supported Values:
0 Hide Header
1 Dynamic Alignment
- Left justified when list is shorter than terminal width.
- Center aligned when list is longer than terminal width.
2 Center Aligned (default)
3 Left Justified
• Default Value: 1
↑ · See also: Listing & Filtering
[10] limit
-----
The maximum number of items included in the `nb` and `nb ls` lists.
Set to `auto` to automatically limit output to the current terminal height.
Subtract an auto limit offset for multiline prompts with `auto-<number>`.
• Example Values:
15
auto
auto-2
• Default Value: 15
[11] nb_dir
------
The location of the directory that contains the notebooks.
For example, to sync all notebooks with Dropbox, create a folder at
`~/Dropbox/Notes` and run: `nb settings set nb_dir ~/Dropbox/Notes`
• Default Value: ~/.nb
↑ · See also: Terminal Syntax Highlighting
[12] syntax_theme
------------
The syntax highlighting theme. View examples with:
bat --list-themes
• Available themes:
1337
DarkNeon
Dracula
GitHub
Monokai Extended
Monokai Extended Bright
Monokai Extended Light
Monokai Extended Origin
Nord
OneHalfDark
OneHalfLight
Solarized (dark)
Solarized (light)
Sublime Snazzy
TwoDark
ansi-dark
ansi-light
base16
base16-256
gruvbox
gruvbox-light
gruvbox-white
zenburn
• Default Value: base16
↑ · See also:
Interactive Shell,
run
Usage:
nb shell [<subcommand> [<options>...] | --clear-history]
Options:
--clear-history Clear the `nb` shell history.
Description:
Start the `nb` interactive shell. Type "exit" to exit.
`nb shell` recognizes all `nb` subcommands and options, providing
a streamlined, distraction-free approach for working with `nb`.
When <subcommand> is present, the command will run as the shell is opened.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-interactive-shell
See Also:
nb help run
Example:
$ nb shell
nb> ls 3
[3] Example
nb> edit 3 --content "New content."
Updated: [3] Example
nb> notebook
home
nb> exit
$
↑ · See also:
Viewing,
Images,
browse
,
open
,
peek
Usage:
nb show ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[[-a | --added] | [--authors] | [-b | --browse] | --filename | --id |
--info-line | --path | [-p | --print] | --relative-path | [-r |
--render] | --title | --type [<type>] | [-u | --updated]] [--no-color]
nb show <notebook>
Options:
-a, --added Print the date and time when the item was added.
--authors List the git commit authors of an item.
-b, --browse Open the item with `nb browse`.
--filename Print the filename of the item.
--id Print the id number of the item.
--info-line Print the id, filename, and title of the item.
--no-color Show without syntax highlighting.
--path Print the full path of the item.
-p, --print Print to standard output / terminal.
--relative-path Print the item's path relative within the notebook.
-r, --render Use `pandoc` [1] to render the file to HTML and display
in the terminal web browser. If either `pandoc` or a
browser are unavailable, `-r` / `--render` is ignored.
--title Print the title of the note.
--type [<type>] Print the file extension or, when <type> is specified,
return true if the item matches <type>. <type> can be a
file extension or one of the following types:
archive, audio, bookmark, document, folder, image,
text, video
-u, --updated Print the date and time of the last recorded change.
Description:
Show an item or notebook. Notes in text file formats can be rendered or
printed to standard output. Non-text files are opened in your system's
preferred app or program for that file type.
By default, the item is opened using `less` or the program configured
in the `$PAGER` environment variable. Use the following keys to navigate
in `less` (see `man less` for more information):
Key Function
--- --------
mouse scroll Scroll up or down
arrow up or down Scroll one line up or down
f Jump forward one window
b Jump back one window
d Jump down one half window
u Jump up one half window
/<query> Search for <query>
n Jump to next <query> match
q Quit
To skip the pager and print to standard output, use the `-p` / `--print`
option.
`-r` / `--render` automatically uses either `w3m` [2] or `links` [3].
To specify a preferred browser, set the `$BROWSER` environment variable
in your .bashrc, .zshrc, or equivalent, e.g.: export BROWSER="links"
If `bat` [4], `highlight` [5], or Pygments [6] is installed, notes are
printed with syntax highlighting.
1. https://pandoc.org/
2. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/W3m
3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Links_(web_browser)
4. https://github.com/sharkdp/bat
5. http://www.andre-simon.de/doku/highlight/en/highlight.php
6. https://pygments.org/
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#viewing
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help open
nb help peek
Examples:
nb show 1
nb show example.md --render
nb show "A Document Title" --print --no-color
nb 1 show
nb example:show 12
nb show example:12
nb example:12 show
nb s 1
nb 1 s
nb s example:12
nb example:12 s
Alias:
nb view
Shortcut Alias:
nb s
↑ · See also:
Git Sync,
History,
archive
,
history
,
notebooks
,
remote
,
sync
,
unarchive
Usage:
nb status [<notebook>]
Description:
Print archival, git, and remote status for the current notebook or <notebook>.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-git-sync
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-revision-history
See Also:
nb help archive
nb help history
nb help notebooks
nb help remote
nb help sync
nb help unarchive
Examples:
nb status
nb status example
Shortcut Alias:
nb st
↑ · See also:
Plugins,
plugins
Usage:
nb subcommands [add <name>...] [alias <name> <alias>]
[describe <name> <usage>]
Subcommands:
add Add a new subcommand.
alias Create an <alias> of a given subcommand <name>, with linked help.
Note that aliases must also be added with `subcommands add`.
describe Set the usage text displayed with `nb help <subcommand>`.
This can be assigned as a heredoc, which is recommended, or
as a string argument.
Description:
List, add, alias, and describe subcommands. New subcommands, aliases, and
descriptions are not persisted, so `add`, `alias`, `describe` are
primarily for plugins.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-plugins
See Also:
nb help plugins
↑ · See also:
Git Sync,
History,
history
,
notebooks
,
remote
,
status
Usage:
nb sync [-a | --all]
Options:
-a, --all Sync all unarchived notebooks.
Description:
Sync the current notebook with its remote.
Private Repositories and Git Credentials:
Syncing with private repositories requires configuring git to not prompt
for credentials.
For repositories cloned over HTTPS, credentials can be cached with git.
For repositories cloned over SSH, keys can be added to the ssh-agent.
More Information:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#private-repositories-and-git-credentials
Sync Conflict Resolution:
When `nb sync` encounters a conflict in a text file and can't merge
overlapping local and remote changes, both versions are saved in the
file, separated by git conflict markers. Use `nb edit` to remove the
conflict markers and delete any unwanted text.
When `nb sync` encounters a conflict in a binary file, such as an
encrypted note or bookmark, both versions of the file are saved in the
notebook as individual files, one with `--conflicted-copy` appended to
the filename.
More Information:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#sync-conflict-resolution
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-git-sync
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-revision-history
See Also:
nb help history
nb help notebooks
nb help remote
nb help status
Examples:
nb sync
nb sync --all
↑ · See also:
Tasks,
Todos,
do
,
todo
,
undo
Usage:
nb tasks ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[open | closed]
Description:
List tasks in todos, notebooks, folders, and other items.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#%EF%B8%8F-tasks
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-todos
See Also:
nb help do
nb help todo
nb help undo
Examples:
nb tasks
nb tasks open
nb tasks closed
nb tasks 123
nb example:tasks open
nb tasks closed sample/
nb tasks closed demo:456
Shortcut Alias:
nb t
↑ · See also:
Todos,
do
,
tasks
,
undo
Usage:
nb todo add [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<filename>] <title>
[--description <description>] [--due <date>]
[-r (<url> | <selector>) | --related (<url> | <selector>)]
[--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...] [--task <title>...]
nb todo delete ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
nb todo do ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[<task-number>]
nb todo undo ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[<task-number>]
nb todos [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/] [open | closed] [--tags <tag1>,<tag2>...]
nb todos tasks ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <description>])
[open | closed]
Options:
--description <description> Description for the todo.
--due <date> Due date and / or time for the todo.
-r, --related (<url> | <selector>) Related URL or selector.
--tags <tag1>,<tag2>... Comma-separated list of tags.
--task <title> Task to add to the tasklist.
Subcommands:
(default) List todos.
add Add a new todo.
Shortcut Aliases: `nb todo a`, `nb todo +`
delete Delete a todo.
Shortcut Aliases: `nb todo -`
do Mark a todo or task as done.
tasks List tasks in todos, notebooks, folders, and other item.
undo Unmark a todo or task as done.
Description:
Manage todos and tasks.
Read More::
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-todos
See Also:
nb help do
nb help tasks
nb help undo
Examples:
nb todo add "Example todo title."
nb todo add Example todo title.
nb todo add "Sample title." --tags tag1,tag2 --related demo:567
nb todos
nb todos open
nb todos closed
nb example:todos open
nb todos closed sample/
Alias:
nb todos
Shortcut Alias:
nb to
↑ · See also:
Archiving Notebooks,
archive
,
notebooks
,
status
Usage:
nb unarchive [<name>]
Description:
Remove "archived" status from the current notebook or notebook <name>.
This is an alias for `nb notebooks unarchive`.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#archiving-notebooks
See Also:
nb help archive
nb help notebooks
nb help status
Examples:
nb unarchive
nb unarchive example
Shortcut Alias:
nb unar
↑ · See also:
Todos,
Tasks,
do
,
tasks
,
todo
Usage:
nb undo ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
[<task-number>]
Description:
Mark a todo or task as not done.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-todos
See Also:
nb help do
nb help tasks
nb help todo
Examples:
nb undo 123
nb undo example:sample/321
nb undo 543 7
↑ · See also:
Pinning,
browse
,
list
,
ls
,
pin
Usage:
nb unpin ([<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id> | <filename> | <title>])
Description:
Unpin a pinned item.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-pinning
See Also:
nb help browse
nb help list
nb help ls
nb help pin
Examples:
nb unpin 123
nb unpin example:sample/321
↑ · See also:
set
& settings
,
settings
Usage:
nb unset (<name> | <number>)
Description:
Unset a setting, returning it to the default value.
This is an alias for `nb settings unset`.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#%EF%B8%8F-set--settings
See Also:
nb help settings
Examples:
nb unset color_primary
nb unset 2
Alias:
nb reset
↑ · See also:
Installation,
env
,
version
Usage:
nb update
Description:
Update `nb` to the latest version. You will be prompted for
your password if administrator privileges are required.
If `nb` was installed using a package manager like npm or
Homebrew, use the package manager's upgrade functionality instead
of this command.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#installation
See Also:
nb help env
nb help version
↑ · See also:
Notebooks,
notebooks
Usage:
nb use <notebook>
Description:
Switch to the specified notebook. Shortcut for `nb notebooks use`.
Read More:
https://github.com/xwmx/nb#-notebooks
See Also:
nb help notebooks
Example:
nb use example
Shortcut Alias:
nb u
↑ · See also:
Installation,
env
,
update
Usage:
nb version
Description:
Display version information.
See Also:
nb help env
nb help update
↑ ·
Plugins,
nb plugins
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/backlink.nb-plugin
Usage:
nb backlink [--force]
Description:
Add backlinks to notes. Crawl notes in a notebook for [[wiki-style links]]
and append a "Backlinks" section to each linked file that lists passages
referencing the note.
To link to a note from within another note, surround the title of the
target note in double square brackets:
Example with link to [[Target Note Title]] in content.
Depends on note-link-janitor:
https://github.com/andymatuschak/note-link-janitor
Requirement: every note in the notebook must have a title.
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/bump.nb-plugin
Usage:
nb bump [<notebook>:][<folder-path>/][<id>][<filename>][<title>]
Description:
Bump an item to the top of the list.
`bump` updates the item's modification timestamp without editing the item
or creating a new commit.
Examples:
nb bump 123
nb bump example:sample/456
Alias:
nb touch
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/clip.nb-plugin
Usage:
nb clip [<notebook>:][<id> | <filename> | <path> | <title> | <extension>]
Description:
Save the clipboard contents and copy contents of text or markdown items to
the clipboard.
When called with no arguments or when no matching file is found, the text
content on the clipboard is saved to a new file, pending a prompt.
Examples:
# copy the content of item 123 to the clipboard
nb clip 123
# save the clipboard contents to a new file with a `.js` file extension
nb clip .js
# save the clipboard contents as a new `.cr` file in the "snippets" notebook
nb snippets:clip .cr
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/daily.nb-plugin
Usage:
nb daily [<content>] [--prev [<number>]]
Options:
--prev [<number>] List previous days and show day by previous <number>.
Description:
Add notes to a daily log. When called without arguments, the current day's
log is displayed. When passed `<content>`, a new timestamped entry is added
to the current day's log, which is created if it doesn't yet exist.
Previous day's logs can be listed with the `--prev` option. View a previous
day's log by passing its `<number>` in the list.
Examples:
nb daily "Example note content."
nb daily
nb daily --prev
nb daily --prev 3
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/ebook.nb-plugin
Usage:
nb ebook new <name>
nb ebook publish
Subcommands:
ebook new Create a new notebook initialized with placeholder files for
authoring an ebook.
ebook publish Generate a .epub file using the current notebook contents.
Description:
Ebook authoring with `nb`.
`nb ebook new` creates a notebook populated with initial placeholder files
for creating an ebook. Edit the title page and chapters using normal `nb`
commands, then use `nb ebook publish` to generate an epub file.
Chapters are expected to be markdown files with sequential numeric
filename prefixes for ordering:
01-example.md
02-sample.md
03-demo.md
Create new chapters with `nb add`:
nb add --filename "04-chapter4.md"
title.txt contains the book metadata in a YAML block. For more information
about the fields for this file, visit:
https://pandoc.org/MANUAL.html#epub-metadata
stylesheet.css contains base styling for the generated ebook. It can be used
as it is and can also be edited using `nb edit`.
As with all `nb` notebooks, changes are recorded automatically in git,
providing automatic version control for all ebook content, source, and
metadata files.
Generated epub files are saved in the notebook and can be previewed in the
terminal with `nb show`. Export a generated epub file with `nb export`:
nb export 12 .
More info:
https://pandoc.org/epub.html
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/example.nb-plugin
Usage:
nb example
Description:
Print "Hello, World!"
nb plugins install https://github.com/xwmx/nb/blob/master/plugins/weather.nb-plugin
Usage:
nb weather [<option>...]
Description:
Display weather information from wttr.in.
More Info:
https://github.com/chubin/wttr.in
https://wttr.in
Examples:
nb weather
nb weather Tokyo
nb weather lax
Shortcut Alias:
nb w
$EDITOR
·
$NB_ACE_ENABLED
·
$NB_ACE_MD_GUTTER
·
$NB_ACE_RELATIVE_LINE_NUMBERS
·
$NB_ACE_SOFT_TABS
·
$NB_ACE_KEYBOARD
·
$NB_AUDIO_TOOL
·
$NB_AUTO_SYNC
·
$NB_BROWSE_MARKDOWN_READER
·
$NB_BROWSE_SERVER_TOOL
·
$NB_BROWSE_SUPPORT_LINKS
·
$NB_BROWSER
·
$NB_COLOR_PRIMARY
·
$NB_COLOR_SECONDARY
·
$NB_COLOR_THEME
·
$NB_CUSTOM_CSS
·
$NB_CUSTOM_CSS_URL
·
$NB_CUSTOM_JAVASCRIPT
·
$NB_CUSTOM_JAVASCRIPT_URL
·
$NB_DATA_TOOL
·
$NB_DEFAULT_EXTENSION
·
$NB_DIR
·
$NB_DIRECTORY_TOOL
·
$NB_EDITOR
·
$NB_ENCRYPTION_TOOL
·
$NB_FOLDERS_FIRST
·
$NB_FOOTER
·
$NB_GUI_BROWSER
·
$NB_HEADER
·
$NB_IMAGE_TOOL
·
$NB_INDICATOR_AUDIO
·
$NB_INDICATOR_BOOKMARK
·
$NB_INDICATOR_DOCUMENT
·
$NB_INDICATOR_EBOOK
·
$NB_INDICATOR_ENCRYPTED
·
$NB_INDICATOR_FOLDER
·
$NB_INDICATOR_IMAGE
·
$NB_INDICATOR_PINNED
·
$NB_INDICATOR_TODO
·
$NB_INDICATOR_TODO_DONE
·
$NB_INDICATOR_VIDEO
·
$NB_LIMIT
·
$NB_MATHJAX_ENABLED
·
$NB_MARKDOWN_TOOL
·
$NB_PINNED_PATTERN
·
$NB_SERVER_HOST
·
$NB_SERVER_PORT
·
$NB_SYNTAX_THEME
·
$NB_USER_AGENT
·
$NBRC_PATH
Settings are set in the ~/.nbrc
configuration
file using environment variables. Settings can be set through nb
using set
& settings
or by
assigning a value to the variable directly in the ~/.nbrc
file, which
can be opened in your $EDITOR
with nb settings edit
.
Example assignment:
export NB_INDICATOR_PINNED="🔮"
The terminal editor command for editing items.
See also: `$NB_EDITOR`
Example Values: 'code', 'emacs', 'hx', 'vim'
Default: '0'
Example Values: '0', '1'
Default: '1'
Example Values: '0', '1'
Default: '0'
Example Values: '0', '1'
Default: '0'
Example Values: '0', '1'
Default: 'ace'
Example Values: 'emacs', 'sublime', 'vim', 'vscode'
Default: '' (first available)
Example Values: `mplayer`, `afplay`
Default: '1'
When set to '1', each `_git checkpoint()` call will automativally run
`$_ME sync`. To disable this behavior, set the value to '0'.
$NB_BROWSE_MARKDOWN_READER
Default: 'markdown+emoji+raw_html+east_asian_line_breaks'
The Pandoc reader, including extensions, to use for converting Markdown to
HTML in `nb browse`.
More information:
https://pandoc.org/MANUAL.html#extensions
https://pandoc.org/MANUAL.html#general-options-1
Default: first available: 'ncat', 'socat', 'netcat', 'bash' (5.2+ only), ''
The tool used to listen on the server host and port and respond to
incoming requests.
Supported Values: 'accept', 'bash', 'nc', 'ncat', netcat', 'socat'
Default: '1'
Set to '0' to hide the 'Donate' and 'Sponsor' links in `nb browse`.
Supported Values: '0' '1'
Default: value of $BROWSER
Example Values: 'links', 'w3m'
Default: Value depends on terminal capabilities.
Set highlighting color. This should be set to an xterm color number, usually
a value between 1 and 256. For a table of common colors and their numbers
run:
nb settings colors
Supported Values: [0..255+]
Default: '8'
Color for lines and other accents. This should be set to an xterm color
number, usually a value between 1 and 256. For a table of common colors and
their numbers, run:
nb settings colors
Supported Values: [0..255+]
Default: 'nb'
The color theme.
Default: ''
A style sheet to be included inline in a `<style>` element on pages
rendered by `nb browse`.
Default: ''
A URL to a style sheet to be included in a `<link rel="stylesheet">`
element on pages rendered by `nb browse`.
Default: ''
A block of JavaScript code to be included inline in a `<script>` element
on pages rendered by `nb browse`.
Default: ''
A URL to a JavaScript file to be included in a `<script src=//url>`
element on pages rendered by `nb browse`.
Default: '' (first available)
Example Values: 'visidata', 'sc-im'
Default: 'md'
Example Values: 'md' 'org'
Default: `$HOME/.nb`
The location of the directory that contains the notebooks.
Default: '' (nb browse)
Example Values: 'ranger', 'mc'
Default: the value of `$EDITOR`
The terminal editor command for editing items. Overrides the value of
`$EDITOR` in the environment.
See also: `$EDITOR`
Example Values: 'code', 'emacs', 'hx', 'vim'
Default: 'openssl'
Supported Values: 'gpg' 'openssl'
Default: '0'
When set to '1', folders are printed before other items in `nb`, `nb ls`,
and `nb browse`.
Supported Values: '0' '1'
Default: '1'
Supported Values: '0' '1'
Default: ''
Example Value: 'firefox'
Default: '2'
Supported Values: '0' '1' '2' '3'
Default: '' (first available)
Example Values: 'imgcat', 'catimg'
Default: 🔉
Default: 🔖
Default: 📄
Default: 📖
Default: 🔒
Default: 📂
Default: 🌄
Default: 📌
Default: ✔️
Default: ✅
Default: 📹
Default: '15'
Set to a positive number to limit the output of `nb` and `nls` to that value.
Set to "auto" to automatically limit output to the current terminal height.
Subtract an auto limit offset for multiline prompts with `auto-<number>`.
Supported Values:
- <number>
- auto-<number>
- auto-<number>
Example Values:
- 15
- auto
- auto-2
Default: '0'
Example Values: '0', '1'
Default: '' (default pager)
Supported Values: 'bat', 'glow', 'mdcat', 'mdless', 'mdv'
Example Value: '#pinned'
Default: 'localhost'
Default: '6789'
Default: 'base16'
Supported Values: Theme names listed with `bat --list-themes`
Default: '' (`curl` or `wget` default user agent)
Default: `$HOME/.nbrc`
The location of the .nbrc configuration file.
.bookmark.md
nb
bookmarks are Markdown documents created using a combination of
user input and data from the bookmarked page. The nb
bookmark format
is intended to be readable, editable, convertible, renderable, and
clearly organized for greatest accessibility.
Bookmarks are identified by a .bookmark.md
file extension. The
bookmark URL is the first URL in the file within <
and >
characters.
To create a minimally valid bookmark file with nb add
:
nb add example.bookmark.md --content "<https://example.com>"
This creates a file with the name example.bookmark.md
containing:
<https://example.com>
In a full bookmark, information is separated into sections,
with each bookmark section indicated by a Markdown h2
heading.
# Example Title (example.com)
<https://example.com>
## Description
Example description.
## Quote
> Example quote line one.
>
> Example quote line two.
## Comment
Example comment.
## Related
- <https://example.net>
- <https://example.org>
- [[example:123]]
## Tags
#tag1 #tag2
## Content
Example Title
=============
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
[More information\...](https://www.iana.org/domains/example)
## Source
```html
<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Example Title</title>
<meta name="description" content="Example description." />
</head>
<body>
<h1>Example Title</h1>
<p>
This domain is for use in illustrative examples in documents. You may
use this domain in literature without prior coordination or asking for
permission.
</p>
<p>
<a href="https://www.iana.org/domains/example">More information...</a>
</p>
</body>
</html>
```
Optional
A Markdown atx-style h1
heading
containing the content of the bookmarked page's
HTML <title>
or og:title
tag, if present, followed by
the domain within parentheses.
# Example Title (example.com)
# (example.com)
Required
The URL of the bookmarked resource, with surrounding angle brackets
(<
, >
).
This is the only required element.
Optional
A text element containing the content of the bookmarked page's meta description
or og:description
tag, if present.
Optional
A markdown quote block containing a user-specified excerpt from the bookmarked resource.
Optional
A text element containing a comment written by the user.
Optional
A Markdown list of
angle bracketed (<
, >
) URLs and
[[wiki-style links]]
that are related to the bookmarked resource.
Optional
A list of #tags
represented as #hashtags
separated by individual spaces.
Optional
The full content of the bookmarked page, converted to Markdown.
The ## Content
section makes the page content available locally for
full-text search and viewing of page content. The source HTML is converted
to inline Markdown to reduce the amount of markup, make it more readable,
and make page content easily viewable in the terminal as markdown and
streamlined HTML in web browsers.
Optional
A fenced code block with html
language identifier containing the source HTML
from the bookmarked page.
nb
does not save the page source by default. nb
uses this section to save
the source HTML page content when pandoc
is not available to convert it to
Markdown.
.todo.md
nb
todos are Markdown documents identified by a .todo.md
file extension.
Todos contain a Markdown h1
heading
starting with a Markdown checkbox ([ ]
/ [x]
) indicating
the todo completion state, followed by the todo title.
# [x] Example todo title.
## Due
2100-01-01
## Description
Example description.
## Tasks
- [ ] One
- [x] Two
- [ ] Three
## Related
- [[example:123]]
- <https://example.org>
## Tags
#tag1 #tag2
Required
A Markdown atx-style h1
heading
containing a Markdown checkbox followed by the todo title.
An x
within the checkbox ([ ]
) indicates that the todo is done.
# [ ] Example undone / open todo title.
# [x] Example done / closed todo title.
Optional
A text element containing a value referencing a due date and / or time for the todo.
Optional
A text element containing a description for the todo.
Optional
A markdown tasklist containing sub-tasks for the todo.
Optional
A Markdown list of
angle bracketed (<
, >
) URLs and
[[wiki-style links]]
that are related to the todo.
Optional
A list of #tags
represented as #hashtags
separated by individual spaces.
An nb
notebook is a directory that contains a valid .git
directory,
indicating that it has been initialized as a git repository, and a .index
file in the root directory.
A notebook folder index is a text file named .index
in any folder
within the notebook directory. .index
contains a list of visible
filenames within the folder, one per line, and the line number of each
filename represents the id. .index
files are included in the git repository
so ids are preserved across systems.
add
- Append a new line containing the filename to
.index
. update
- Overwrite the existing filename in
.index
with the new filename. delete
- Delete the filename, preserving the newline, leaving the line blank.
reconcile
- Remove duplicate lines, preserving existing blank lines,
add
entries for new files, anddelete
entries for deleted files. rebuild
- Delete and rebuild
.index
, listing files by most recently modified, reversed.
nb
manages the .index
of each folder within a notebook using an internal
index
subcommand.
Usage:
nb index add <filename>
nb index delete <filename>
nb index edit
nb index get_basename <id>
nb index get_id <filename>
nb index get_max_id
nb index rebuild [--ancestors]
nb index reconcile [--ancestors] [--commit]
nb index show
nb index update <existing-filename> <new-filename>
nb index verify
nb index <subcommand> <options>... [<folder-path>]
Options:
--ancestors Perform the action on all folders within the notebook that
are ancestors of the current folder.
--commit Commit changes to git.
Subcommands:
add Add <filename> to the index.
delete Delete <filename> from the index.
edit Open the index file in `$EDITOR`.
get_basename Print the filename / basename at the specified <id>.
get_id Get the id for <filename>.
get_max_id Get the maximum id for the folder.
rebuild Rebuild the index, listing files by last modified, reversed.
Some ids will change. Prefer `nb index reconcile`.
reconcile Remove duplicates and update index for added and deleted files.
show Print the index.
update Overwrite the <existing-filename> entry with <new-filename>.
verify Verify that the index matches the folder contents.
Description:
Manage the index for the current folder or the folder at <folder-path>,
which can be passed as the final argument to any `index` subcommand.
`index` is used internally by `nb` and using it manually will
probably corrupt the index. If something goes wrong with an index,
fix it with `nb index reconcile`.
An index is a text file named '.index' in any folder within a notebook.
.index contains a list of filenames and the line number of each filename
represents the id. .index files are included in the git repository so
ids are preserved across systems.
Any folder may contain an optional plain text file named .pindex
containing a list of basenames from that folder, one per line, that should
be treated as pinned, meaning they appear first in some
list operations, including nb
and nb ls
. Entries are added to a
.pindex
file with nb pin
and removed with nb unpin
.
A notebook is considered archived
when it contains a file named .archived
at the root level of the notebook directory.
With more than 2,200 tests spanning tens of thousands of lines,
nb
is really mostly a
test suite.
Tests run continuously via GitHub Actions
on recent versions of both Ubuntu and macOS to account for differences between
BSD and GNU tools and Bash versions.
To run the tests locally, install
Bats
and the recommended dependencies,
then run bats test
within the project root directory. Run groups of
tests with globbing, e.g., bats test/browse*
and bats test/folders*
.