The AutoMOC plugin streamlines the process of managing Map of Content (MOC) notes in Obsidian. It ensures that backlinks, tagged mentions, and alias references are not missed by automatically importing them into the current note. Users can execute three key commands: importing notes based on linked mentions, tagged mentions, or specific aliases, all of which can be run through the command palette or shortcuts. The plugin supports frontmatter properties such as aliases and tags, allowing for more dynamic linking. Additional features include options for anchor links to headings, importing notes as various list formats, and ignoring specified folders during imports.
The Daily Note Outline plugin enhances organization in Obsidian by providing an overview of multiple daily notes in a structured outline view. It allows users to display headings, links, tags, and list items from daily notes, making it easier to locate past notes. The plugin integrates with the Periodic Notes plugin, supporting weekly, monthly, and yearly notes. It offers filtering options to include or exclude specific elements, and the ability to create missing daily notes based on unresolved links.
The Nav Link Header plugin enhances navigation within Obsidian by adding links at the top of notes for easier movement between related content. It supports annotated links, allowing users to add specific strings before links to create backlinks that appear in destination notes. The plugin also provides quick access to adjacent daily, weekly, monthly, and yearly notes, making it convenient for time-based navigation. Additionally, it supports both wikilinks and markdown format links.
The Influx plugin enhances Obsidian's backlinks functionality by providing formatted excerpts from notes containing linked mentions. It organizes and displays these excerpts based on their hierarchical position, such as bullet-level indentation, making it easier to navigate and aggregate relevant information. Designed for users who take notes hierarchically or follow bullet journaling methods, it enables the creation of topical notes as aggregates of clippings from daily notes. The plugin encourages using links as the primary organizing method for completeness and consistency, offering a streamlined way to manage and visualize interconnected information.
The Hierarchical Backlinks plugin brings a new layer of organization to Obsidian’s backlinking feature by displaying backlinks as a collapsible tree based on your folder structure. This is particularly useful for users who rely on a well-defined directory organization over tags, allowing them to see how documents connect within the hierarchy of their folders. Instead of the standard flat list of backlinks, this plugin provides a more structured view, making it easy to navigate and focus on specific reference groups. With clickable links to each referenced note, it enhances navigation and makes backlink management more intuitive for those who prefer a physical folder structure in their note-taking workflow.
The Frontmatter Markdown Links plugin enhances Obsidian by enabling support for markdown links within frontmatter. It allows users to include internal and external markdown links, making them clickable across different modes such as source, live preview, and reading views. The plugin improves note organization by ensuring backlinks work with markdown links in frontmatter, providing a seamless way to reference related content.
The Project Browser plugin enhances your Obsidian workspace by providing an intuitive card-based layout for managing project files. It organizes files within each folder according to their status and allows users to filter the view using an inbuilt search feature. Files can be tagged with states using a convenient menu, and the plugin remembers the last state of the backlink panel for each file. This organization tool is ideal for users who manage complex projects within Obsidian, making navigation and file management more efficient. The plugin also focuses on making workflows smoother with features like back/forward navigation and customizable states.
The Backlink Full Path plugin enhances Obsidian’s backlink panel by displaying the complete file path of each backlink instead of just the file name. This is especially useful for users who maintain notes with identical titles across different folders, as it removes ambiguity and provides better context for where each backlink originates.
The Link Tree plugin provides an interactive, expandable view of the links and backlinks within a note, mimicking outliner tools like WorkFlowy and Dynalist. It allows users to explore their note connections through a recursive tree structure, where they can easily expand or collapse nodes to reveal or hide forward and backward links. The plugin also supports filtering links by pathname and provides options to view note content, including editable text. Designed to work with the Dataview plugin, it enhances navigation within a vault by visually mapping out relationships between notes.
The Default query in backlinks plugin allows users to customize the default navigation of backlinks in Obsidian. It helps set a default search query, including options to collapse results, show more context, and sort the order of backlinks. The plugin also provides the ability to remember the display configuration of the backlinks panel for each file. This enhances the efficiency of working with backlinks by eliminating the need for manual input of search queries, especially when filtering out specific notes like daily logs. The plugin is perfect for users looking to streamline their backlink navigation and avoid clutter in their workspace.