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An Obsidian plugin to search and embed blocks with ^block-references (aka ^block-ids)

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tyler-dot-earth/obsidian-blockreffer

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Blockreffer for Obsidian

Search and embed blocks with ^block-references aka ^block-refs aka ^block-ids.

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Features

  • Embed blocks with ^block-refs
  • Search your vault for blocks with ^block-refs

Installation

Like all other plugins, you can install this in Obsidian - Settings > Plugins > Community plugins > Browse > search for Blockreffer

You can also click the install button on Obsidian plugin's search page: https://obsidian.md/plugins?search=blockreffer

Alternatively, use BRAT to install beta versions of this plugin:

  1. Install BRAT
    • Search for "BRAT" in Obsidian's community plugins
    • This may also work for you: obsidian://show-plugin?id=obsidian42-brat
  2. Enable BRAT after installation
  3. Open BRAT settings
  4. Click "Add Beta plugin"
  5. Paste this into the repository field: https://github.com/tyler-dot-earth/obsidian-blockreffer
  6. Click "Add plugin"
  7. ✨ The plugin should now be installed.
    • NOTE: this will automatically update and use the latest beta version of the plugin.

FAQ

What are block references?

Check out the Obsidian docs: https://help.obsidian.md/Linking+notes+and+files/Internal+links#Link+to+a+block+in+a+note

Can I assign hotkeys to this plugin's commands?

Yes. Use the Hotkeys (core Obsidian plugin) to assign hotkeys to this plugin's commands.


Contributing

Contributors

First time developing plugins?

Quick starting guide for new plugin devs:

  • Clone your repo to a local development folder. For convenience, you can place this folder in your .obsidian/plugins/your-plugin-name folder.
  • Install NodeJS, then run npm i in the command line under your repo folder.
  • Run npm run dev to compile your plugin from main.ts to main.js.
  • Make changes to main.ts (or create new .ts files). Those changes should be automatically compiled into main.js.
  • Reload Obsidian to load the new version of your plugin.
  • Enable plugin in settings window.
  • For updates to the Obsidian API run npm update in the command line under your repo folder.

Releasing new releases

  • Update your manifest.json with your new version number, such as 1.0.1, and the minimum Obsidian version required for your latest release.
  • Update your versions.json file with "new-plugin-version": "minimum-obsidian-version" so older versions of Obsidian can download an older version of your plugin that's compatible.
  • Create new GitHub release using your new version number as the "Tag version". Use the exact version number, don't include a prefix v. See here for an example: https://github.com/obsidianmd/obsidian-sample-plugin/releases
  • Upload the files manifest.json, main.js, styles.css as binary attachments. Note: The manifest.json file must be in two places, first the root path of your repository and also in the release.
  • Publish the release.

You can simplify the version bump process by running npm version patch, npm version minor or npm version major after updating minAppVersion manually in manifest.json. The command will bump version in manifest.json and package.json, and add the entry for the new version to versions.json

Adding your plugin to the community plugin list

How to use

  • Clone this repo.
  • Make sure your NodeJS is at least v16 (node --version).
  • npm i or yarn to install dependencies.
  • npm run dev to start compilation in watch mode.

Manually installing the plugin

  • Copy over main.js, styles.css, manifest.json to your vault VaultFolder/.obsidian/plugins/your-plugin-id/.

Improve code quality with eslint (optional)

  • ESLint is a tool that analyzes your code to quickly find problems. You can run ESLint against your plugin to find common bugs and ways to improve your code.
  • To use eslint with this project, make sure to install eslint from terminal:
    • npm install -g eslint
  • To use eslint to analyze this project use this command:
    • eslint main.ts
    • eslint will then create a report with suggestions for code improvement by file and line number.
  • If your source code is in a folder, such as src, you can use eslint with this command to analyze all files in that folder:
    • eslint .\src\

Funding

If you found this project helpful, please consider kicking a couple bucks my way:

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An Obsidian plugin to search and embed blocks with ^block-references (aka ^block-ids)

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