Gatsby Garden lets you create a static HTML version of your markdown notes. You can convert your Obsidian Zettelkasten Notes into a public Digital Garden.
To see an example site built using Gatsby Garden, visit my Digital Garden
To use this tool, you'll need node, npm and git installed on your system.
Once you have installed the necessary tools, you can create a new site using gatsby-garden
using this command...
git clone https://github.com/binnyva/gatsby-garden my-garden
In this example, my-garden
is the name of your site. You can test it using this command...
cd my-garden
npm install --legacy-peer-deps
npm run develop
If everything went fine, you should see gatsby-garden
running in your browser at http://localhost:8000/.
Once gatsby-garden has been installed, add your markdown notes to the _notes
folder. Make sure you delete all the sample notes there first. If you are using Obsidian to create notes, you can set the _notes
folder to be a shortcut/link to the Obsidian vault. If you don't do that, you'll have to copy over all the notes from the vault to the _notes
folder everytime you want to make a static build of your notes.
Edit gatsby-config.js
file and add your site details to the siteMetaData
section. Few supported values are...
module.exports = {
// pathPrefix: `/notes`, // If your site has to be published at a non-root location, use this to specify the base folder. You'll see this in effect ONLY when you build the site with the 'gatsby build --prefix-paths' command. See <https://www.gatsbyjs.com/docs/how-to/previews-deploys-hosting/path-prefix/> for more details.
siteMetadata: {
title: `Website Name`,
description: `Short Description about the website`,
siteUrl: `https://yoursite.com/notes/`, // URL at which your site will be published
headerMenu: [ // Top Navbar items
{type: 'page', item: '', title: 'Home'}, // Type can be 'page', 'note', 'tag', 'text' or 'link'
{type: 'page', item: 'sitemap', title: 'Sitemap'},
{type: 'page', item: 'rss.xml', title: 'RSS'},
{
type: 'page', item: 'tags', title: 'Tags',
menu: [ // Only one level depth, please.
{type: 'tag',item: 'programming'},
{type: 'tag',item: 'philosophy'},
{type: 'tag',item: 'psychology'},
{type: 'tag',item: 'rationality'},
]
},
],
menu: [ // This is the Table of Contents that comes in the home page if a homeNote is not specified. It can be much longer than the header menu.
// ... Same structure as headerMenu. You can have any depth level - multiple menus can be nested.
]
},
If you want to set any note as your Home Note(the first page that shows up when you open the site), just give the home
slug. You can do this by adding this to that note's frontmatter...
slug: "home"
Once you are done with the configuration, you can generate the static version of your site. Use this command to do it...
npm run build
PS: You'll need to use npm run build -- --prefix-paths
if you are using a sub-directory for publishing your content.
If you want to change something, edit the code in the src
folder. You'll need a bit of JavaScript knowledge to do this. To do this well, you'll need to know how Gatsby works.
You can test your modifications using this command...
npm run develop
The notes in the _notes
folder have to be in markdown format. Ideally, in this format...
---
title: 'Zettelkasten'
tags: ['zettelkasten', 'pkm', 'notes', 'learning']
date: 2021-01-20 19:30:00
---
Zettelkasten is a note taking process and a [[knowledge management system]].
The top part(within the ---
) is called frontmatter. Its the metadata about the note. This should be in YAML format. The following properties are supported...
Obsidian will create notes in this format.
One of the reasons I built this tool is to learn Gatsby. If you know what Gatsby and want to help with this project, I'm more than excited to get some expert help :-D. If you are interested in helping out, go to the Contributing page.