From 270446f98c2a43f6d93eb930bcc318d87bcc1236 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: Marcin Chrzanowski
+As mentioned previously on the blog, for a long time I was relying on
+'>
+ GitJournal
+ for note taking. There were quite a few reasons I really liked it:
+
+But there's also some issues I kept running into:
+
+
+
+
+git
(which I can selfhost).
+
+git
implementation on the mobile app has its problems. E.g.
+ merge conflicts are not going to be resolved, sometimes leading to forced
+ commits that remove notes. All of this can be resolved on a computer with
+ access to the repo, but it can become a hassle.
+
+None of these issues are absolute deal breakers, and I still think GitJournal is +a really nice solution that I can recommend, but all the slight annoyances led +me on a search for a potential replacement. If I didn't find anything better, I +would have been happy to stick with GitJournal, but maybe there's a note taking +solution somewhere out there that would suit me better? +
+ ++If you do some research on note taking apps you'll be greeted with a flood of +content from "productivity" YouTubers, bloggers, etc. Turns out there's a ton of +options for different types of workflows and preferences, however most of them +are +
+ ++Enter LogSeq. +
+ ++Let me start off by saying that LogSeq is not the perfect solution for +me, but I'll go over my personal gripes with it later. First, let's talk about +what LogSeq even is and what's good about it. +
+ ++LogSeq is an open source note taking application that is privacy-first, +outline-based, non-hierarchical, and features bidirectional linking. Let's break +that down: +
+ ++Some other features to mention: +
+ ++LogSeq automatically creates daily journal pages. These can be used for +journaling or as a dumping spot of random ideas, links you encounter, notes to +jot down. Thanks to backlinks, if you include tags or links to topic pages in +your notes, you'll be able to find these seemingly chaotic daily notes when +looking at a specific topic later. +
+ ++There is a plugin interface, and an already fairly large marketplace of +community-built plugins available. Many are just visual tweaks you can add if +you like them, there's also a bunch of integrations with various other note +taking/productivity apps (which I personally don't use, but many find them +useful, from what I hear, in their workflows). There's really only one plugin +I'm using currently, more on that in the next section, but overall its nice to +see extensibility. +
+ +
+As mentioned, there's no synchronization enabled by default. There is a
+recommended cloud sync option with LogSeq's servers, which respects your privacy
+by end-to-end encrypting all your content, but you know me. I prefer to sync my
+notes with git
. Not only does this allow me to selfhost my notes,
+it also gives me all the benefits of version control (history, a way to deal
+with merge conflicts when dealing with multiple devices).
+
+Since all of LogSeq's note files are just plain-text on your disk, setting up +git synchronization is trivial: just make the notes directory a git repo, add a +remote, and voilá. +
+ +
+Here's also where a plugin comes in useful: there's a git
plugin
+that makes it easy to commit, push, and pull changes from within LogSeq itself,
+rather than having to switch between it and a terminal.
+
+Note: LogSeq does have a separate built-in version control feature that's based
+on git
, but I recommend against it. It's based on automatically
+committing every x seconds, so you never exactly know if your latest
+changes are already committed, and you end up with a very messy history of
+partial and/or unrelated changes going into individual commits.
+
+There is a functional mobile app, with the same look and most of the same
+features as the desktop application. It is missing plugins, so in particular, no
+git plugin. git
synchronization on Android is still possible with
+Termux, but less convenient than on a desktop, since it requires you to manually
+go into Termux to commit/push/pull changes (and be very careful of ending up
+with a merge conflict on your phone, that's much less fun to deal with on a
+phone screen than in your favorite desktop editor).
+
#article
) that are about graph theory (tagged with
+ #[[graph theory]]
) published in the last year (a date property
+ is within a particular time frame).
+ +The first two I use regularly. Queries I want to eventually get into. The others +I don't really find use for. +
+ ++There are a few things I'm personally not a fan of with LogSeq. +
+ +
+The biggest general problem for me is that despite a nice, minimal interface,
+LogSeq is an Electron application. The logseq-desktop-bin
AUR
+package is 500MB! All for a note taking application. In addition to the
+bloat coming from Electron, I think a lot of it is also features that I have
+absolutely no use for (like the aforementioned graph view and whiteboards, which
+go way beyond basic text editing and markup).
+
+Many people these days brush bloat under the rug, saying that on modern machines +it doesn't matter, and frameworks like Electron are good because it means +faster, simpler development. But these problems do end up having consequences. +For example, LogSeq struggles with large files. +
+ +
+The full text of Shakespeare's Othello (around 160KB) takes several
+seconds to load, and the app displays a bright orange warning message that
+"Large blocks will not be editable or searchable to not slow down the app."
+vim
opens the same file in a fraction of a second, a web browser
+takes maybe about a second.
+
+The LogSeq team say that the underlying text files are just MarkDown, but that's +not exactly true. +
+ ++The notes have to be all organized into bullet points, you don't have plain +paragraphs or headings. Furthermore, additional markup is inserted, e.g. for +block references. All of that makes the text less human-readable/-editable, a +core feature of MarkDown. +
+ ++Which leads to the next very sad problem... +
+ +vim
+Once you get used to vim
, all other text editing options are just
+inferior. Bram's gift to humanity is both a blessing and a curse, since there's
+no getting away from sometimes needing to edit text outside of it.
+
+Yes, there's a "vim" plugin that implements some keybindings, but I tend to stay +away from those, as they're always disappointing: they implement some of the +most basic keys, but others I'm used to relying on are not supported. So I'd +have to remember which plugin for which piece of software implements which ones, +and it just becomes more of a hassle than a convenience. +
+ +
+As mentioned above, using vim
directly on the text files is also
+not a solution, since the notes format is not exactly standard MarkDown, and
+either way you'd lose all the benefits of LogSeq, especially links/backlinks.
+
+So, with that ranty section above over, what's my final verdict on LogSeq? I've +been using it daily for the past several months, and until something better +comes along, I don't plan on switching. Despite all its shortcomings, I really +like it, it helps me organize my notes and thoughts. +
+ ++I was actually aware of Obsidian before, and it had piqued my interest, seemed +like a useful tool. However, I didn't want to jump onto a proprietary +note taking solution. When doing my recent research on these apps, I found +LogSeq, which is a FOSS alternative. I was reluctant at first, for all the +reasons stated above, but after just a bit of test running, turns out the +benefits outweigh the trade-offs I have to make, and LogSeq has replaced +GitJournal for me. +
+ ++To finish this post, let me go on a little fantastical journey into what my +ideal note taking solution would look like. +
+ +vim
addiction, it would be a vim
plugin.
+ git
.
+