Search and embed blocks with ^block-references
aka ^block-refs
aka ^block-ids
.
- Embed blocks with
^block-refs
- Search your vault for blocks with
^block-refs
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:
- Install BRAT
- Search for "BRAT" in Obsidian's community plugins
- This may also work for you: obsidian://show-plugin?id=obsidian42-brat
- Enable BRAT after installation
- Open BRAT settings
- Click "Add Beta plugin"
- Paste this into the repository field:
https://github.com/tyler-dot-earth/obsidian-blockreffer
- Click "Add plugin"
- ✨ The plugin should now be installed.
- NOTE: this will automatically update and use the latest beta version of the plugin.
Check out the Obsidian docs: https://help.obsidian.md/Linking+notes+and+files/Internal+links#Link+to+a+block+in+a+note
Yes. Use the Hotkeys
(core Obsidian plugin) to assign hotkeys to this plugin's commands.
- tyler.earth - plugin author
- GuardKenzie - settings
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 frommain.ts
tomain.js
. - Make changes to
main.ts
(or create new.ts
files). Those changes should be automatically compiled intomain.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.
- Update your
manifest.json
with your new version number, such as1.0.1
, 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
ornpm version major
after updatingminAppVersion
manually inmanifest.json
. The command will bump version inmanifest.json
andpackage.json
, and add the entry for the new version toversions.json
- Check https://github.com/obsidianmd/obsidian-releases/blob/master/plugin-review.md
- Publish an initial version.
- Make sure you have a
README.md
file in the root of your repo. - Make a pull request at https://github.com/obsidianmd/obsidian-releases to add your plugin.
- Clone this repo.
- Make sure your NodeJS is at least v16 (
node --version
). npm i
oryarn
to install dependencies.npm run dev
to start compilation in watch mode.
- Copy over
main.js
,styles.css
,manifest.json
to your vaultVaultFolder/.obsidian/plugins/your-plugin-id/
.
- 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\
If you found this project helpful, please consider kicking a couple bucks my way: