Skip to content

All pages & the graph

Two views for finding things when you don’t remember where they live: a filterable All pages index, and a graph view of every page and the links between them.

The list icon in the sidebar toolbar opens All pages: every named page, whiteboard, and stored PDF in one index.

  • An A–Z / 0–9 / # strip filters by first character — letters with no matches dim, and clicking the active letter clears it.
  • Kind chips (All types / Pages / Whiteboards / PDFs) compose with the letter filter.
  • Each row shows a type badge and its created / updated dates (file dates for PDFs), shown in your local time zone.
  • The filters and column headers stay pinned while the list scrolls.

Clicking a row opens the page, board, or PDF. Journal days are deliberately excluded — the sidebar calendar (with a dot on every day that has an entry) is their browser.

The Graph button in the All pages header opens a Logseq-style map: every page and whiteboard is a node, every [[wiki-link]] / #tag connection an edge, laid out by a force simulation — your most-linked hub pages pull into the middle, small clusters settle around them, and unlinked pages ring the outside.

  • Drag the background (or scroll) to pan, pinch or -scroll to zoom, drag a node to reposition it, click one to open it, and hover to highlight a node’s neighborhood.
  • The panel carries a legend with live counts (pages, whiteboards, links, orphans), a search box that lights up matching nodes and dims the rest, and filters: journal days (off by default — thousands of day nodes swamp the map), orphan pages, and whiteboards.
  • Reset graph re-runs the layout with a fresh camera fit.

A page counts as an orphan only if nothing links to it anywhere — a page referenced only from (hidden) journal days still shows; it just has no visible edges until you switch journals on.