If you want to see it and get an idea about what it does and how it’s supposed to be used, go here:
https://docs.zettlr.com/en/core/user-interface/
Finding that information took some digging — although there is a visual on the homepage after scrolling several screens down (at least on mobile).
Constructive feedback for the team: I find the website and documentation difficult to use because they present details first and main ideas later. See if you can put the bottom line on the top line.
Also, as I navigated through the site, every time I followed a link I got asked, again and again, whether I wanted to opt out of cookies and data collection. Answering once should be enough.
Zettlr is older than both of them. It has no plugins, and not sure about Logseq, but Obsidian is not really in the zettelkasten-cult. So besides also using Markdown and being notes-managers, there is very little resemblance between those apps.
[1] https://notes.andymatuschak.org/%C2%A7Note-writing_systems
For me: It fits the Zettlekasten method as far as I want to take that. However the tools in doing to don't impose that. Tools I like in particular:
Configurable left pane with files and folders similar to a code editor like VSCodium or SublimeText.
Quasi WYSIWYG markdown. It helps, especially for things like quotes.
Inline tags, inline references via linked bibtex (for me, from Jabref), timestamps.
Another pane on the right I configured summarising links, references. These panes can be hidden for full screen editing too.
Exports in a wide range of formats.
Zettlr facilitates the creation of knowledge better than any other note taking application I've tried. On top of that, it's open source.
Apologies in advance if this sounds like an ad. I have no affiliation with the project other than as a user.
- inline markdown preview
- VIM Keybinds (with some issues, as many implementations have)
- mermaid and LaTeX math support built in
(Notice that 2/3 of these are easily done on many other editors via plugins/extensions)
It has some other nice things too but I find it to be kind of slow and clunky. Still I come back for the way markdown works there because it feels like WYSIWYG but without so much mouse clicking. I have minimally used the pandoc and other publishing features but wasn't blown away by them vs just using pandoc
* Manubot: https://manubot.org/ - Demo: https://trangdata.github.io/treeheatr-manuscript/
* Quarto: https://quarto.org/docs/manuscripts/ - Demo: https://quarto-ext.github.io/manuscript-template-jupyter/
Pandoc and git are powerful tools that I think may improve scientific research, but there are some obstacles before these can replace word
Please reply links here for some nice zettlr-generated static sites :)
Zettlr has this https://docs.zettlr.com/en/advanced/graph/ , hopefully I'll update this later when I have found a nice public export example