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by romesc 1006 days ago
I am approaching 3 years with Obsidian!

What I have found works best is to basically forget about putting strong priors on the structure of your notes. Just let everything be flat - or at most, create one level of hierarchy for a specific project.

When you have a new thought, use search. I have a command that pulls up the advanced search tool plugin and fuzzy searches my term. I then quickly scan (visually as cards) the notes I created already. If there is something related to my idea I open that note and continue that thread. If it's new, I create a new note.

This can be improved even more by using tags liberally, but I find that just having a powerful search and taking the time to "check" before creating a new note works very well for my style of note taking!

2 comments

My “system” in Apple Notes is that I just make sure to include words I know I’m likely to use to search for something later. It’s like tagging, but less work.

Search does the rest of the “organizing”

I’m not sure if it’s iOS 17 only or not but you can add tags to your Apple Notes.

Then, you can create smart folders for a tag or a combination of tags.

It’s a nice way to organize stuff without putting effort into it.

I'm at roughly 2 years, and I totally agree. If you make the friction to create a note high, you won't write anything down. I find tags sometimes helpful, but the only structure I really stick to is to create a daily note every day and start writing down what I need to do. It replaces a previous habit of creating a YYYYMMDD.txt file in Vim.

I sometimes organize book/paper notes in a specific folder, mostly to keep things separated out from the daily notes.