ZIM-like attachment browser
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A while ago I used Zim-Wiki App and liked their approach to attachments. In my opinion, this was one of their best features and I would like to see it in Obsidian. It works like this:
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After creating a note and dragging a file (or an image) into it to create a link in the note, the attachment folder is created with the same name as the note and in the same folder.
(Say, you create a note “TEST” in folder X. The note file will have a path “…/X/TEST.md” and its attachment folder will have a path “…/X/TEST”).
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So far, nothing special. But what matters is the following:
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Moving & renaming. If you rename or move the note, the attachment folder is automatically renamed (moved) as well. That is, the attachment folder always follows its note, and they always remain interconnected and in the same folder.
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Attachment browser. You can see all your files (images) related to the note in a separate sidebar pane — called “Attachment Browser” in a similar way you can see “Backlinks”, “Outline”, “Tags”. From there, you can open individual files or you can open the attachment folder in your System Explorer. This is very handy for example, when you need to send all documents related to the topic to someone else.
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Attachment Folders/Files hidden in the “File Explorer”. The attachment folders and individual files are not shown in the “File Explorer” (I mean in your vault´s tree). This is great because they don’t clutter your tree and the tree is greatly reduced and simplified. You have all your files related to the topic nicely organized and can see them in the attachment browser, when necessary.
This is a great way of organization for my purposes. I´m a lawyer. When I have a note about some legal issue, I can just dump all related sources (court decisions, articles, etc) into its attachment folder and always find them there. And in my tree (left-side pane) I have only the name of the topic and not a bunch of notes, files and other clutter; the tree always remains simple and uncluttered.