Markdown Notes for VS Code
Use [[wiki-links]]
, backlinks
, #tags
and @bibtex-citations
for fast-navigation of markdown notes.
Automatically create notes from new inline [[wiki-links]]
.
Bring some of the awesome features from apps like Notational Velocity, nvalt, Bear, FSNotes, Obsidian to VS Code, where you also have (1) Vim key bindings and (2) excellent extensibility.
Install from the VSCode Marketplace. See more in the blog post: Suping Up VS Code as a Markdown Notebook.
For common issues / workarounds, please see TROUBLESHOOTING-FAQ.md
Also, take a look at the RECOMMENDED-SETTINGS.md
[[wiki-links]]
A popular feature in Roam Research and Bear is the ability to quickly reference other notes using "Cross-Note Links" in the [[wiki-link]]
style.
Markdown Notes provides syntax highlighting, auto-complete, Go to Definition (editor.action.revealDefinition
), and Peek Definition (editor.action.peekDefinition
) support for wiki-links to notes in a workspace.
By default, the extension assumes each markdown file in a workspace has a unique name, so that note.md
will resolve to the file with this name, regardless of whether or not this file exists in any subdirectory path. This tends to be a bit cleaner, but if you want support for multiple files with the same name, in settings.json
set "vscodeMarkdownNotes.workspaceFilenameConvention": "relativePaths"
, and you'll get completions like note1/note.md
and ../note2/note.md
.
You can configure piped wiki-link syntax to use either [[file|description]]
, or [[description|file]]
format (to show pretty titles instead of filenames in your rendered HTML).
Syntax highlighting for #tags
.
@bibtex-citations
Use pandoc-style citations in your notes (eg @author_title_year
) to get syntax highlighting, autocompletion and go to definition, if you setup a global BibTeX file with your references.
New Note Command
Provides a command for quickly creating a new note.
You can bind this to a keyboard shortcut by adding to your keybindings.json
:
{
"key": "alt+shift+n",
"command": "vscodeMarkdownNotes.newNote",
},
NB: there is also a command vscodeMarkdownNotes.newNoteFromSelection
which will "cut" the selected text from the current document, prompt for a note name, create a new note with that name, and insert the new text into that note.
Screenshots
Create New Note On Missing Go To Definition
Intellisense Completion for Wiki Links, uniqueFilenames
Intellisense Completion for Wiki Links, relativePaths
Intellisense Completion for BibTeX Citations
Backlinks Explorer Panel
Peek and Go to Definition for Wiki Links
Peek References to Wiki Links
Peek References to Tag
Peek Definition for BibTeX Citations
Find All References to Wiki Links
Find All References to Tag
cmd+shift+f
to Search Workspace for Notes with Tag
Piped Wiki Link Support
New Note Command
New Note from Selection Command
dev
Run npm install
first.
TODO
- Provide better support for ignore patterns, eg, don't complete
file.md
if it is within ignored_dir/
- Add option to complete files without extension, to
[[file]]
vs file.md
- Should we support links to headings? eg,
file.md#heading-text
?
Development and Release
Test
For focused jest tests,
Run a focused test with ,rl
on a line in a test file, eg line 8, which will make a call to:
./jest-focused.sh ./src/test/jest/extension.test.ts:8
to run only the test at that line. NB, you will also need these bindings for ,rl
To run all tests,
npm run test
All tests are headless.
Release
To create a new release,
npm install
# bump version number in package.json
npm run vpackage # package the release, creates vsix
npm run vpublish # publish to store, see https://code.visualstudio.com/api/working-with-extensions/publishing-extension
# Will prompt for Azure Devops Personal Access Token, get fresh one at:
# https://dev.azure.com/andrewkortina/
# On "Error: Failed Request: Unauthorized(401)"
# see: https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode-vsce/issues/11
# The reason for returning 401 was that I didn't set the Accounts setting to all accessible accounts.
To install the vsix
locally:
- Select Extensions
(Ctrl + Shift + X)
- Open
More Action
menu (ellipsis on the top) and click Install from VSIX…
- Locate VSIX file and select.
- Reload VSCode.
Helpful Links