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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 5th, 2023

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  • Hey there, sounds like you’ve never driven a car before. No shame! I’m more than happy to clear up any confusion.

    Typically, roads with a single lane in each direction are not elevated off the ground. Meaning there is a location known as the “side of the road” where people are able to pull off if they have car trouble or are impeding a huge line of traffic. Unfortunately, this “side of the road” i mentioned previously is typically dirt, meaning that it’s very dangerous to pass from. In many regions where common courtesy exists, pulling over to the side of the road (refer to previous sentences if still unsure) is very much appreciated.

    Hopefully this helps! If you’re still feeling a little slack jawed about the whole thing, feel free to let me know :)




  • Great insight! This is one of those real “a-ha” moments that keeps me using Obsidian today.

    One concept that backlinking and a bottom-up note structure gave me insight on was actually this exact concept of “emergence.” The idea that out of a large amount of chaos, order and structure can naturally form. I’ve been able to connect it to everything from philosophy to mental health to natural language and it’s very exciting.

    I am a person with late diagnosed ADHD/autism so my life breeds chaos. The assurance that you can just write without having to worry about where the note goes is so powerful.

    Nicole van der Hoeven is a great resource! If you’re looking for more YouTubers, I would recommend Artem Kirsanov. He has a couple of videos on bottom-up note taking/zettelkasten, but also has some really interesting conceptual videos on how people learn and retain knowledge. He’s a computational neuroscience student but he’s great at being interesting and not overly dry about his explanations. My primary Obsidian resource on YouTube is Bryan Jenks. I’ve basically stolen most of his setup because he also has the same pain points I do (namely having terrible working memory and issues starting tasks).

    Good luck and thanks for the post!


  • If you’re using regex I’m assuming you know of utilities like Regex 101 to check your syntax.

    With JS-styled regex the entire statement is enclosed in slashes. /parent:: $/ should have the desired effect here.

    I second DataView for these kinds of tasks as the plugin revolves around YAML frontmatter. I have a utility note called “notes with cleanable metadata” that has a bunch of these DataView queries that update in real time.

    Good luck!