I have two vaults:
The two vaults have the same structure, but different contents. Usually the distinction is pretty clear-cut, but occasionally there’s some overlap. For example, I learn about AWS in the course of my work. If I learn something which is generically useful and not specific to my employer’s setup, I’ll put the notes in my personal vault rather than the work vault.
I’m using the Minimal theme, and I use the Minimal Settings plugin to give each vault a distinct appearance. I’m a very visual person, and making the two vaults look different helps reinforce the distinction in my mind. I use a similar set of colour-based themes to help me distinguish between Slack workspaces.
I’m a big fan of keyword tagging, and I use it in all my notes. Every note has at least one tag; often multiple.
I tag liberally, adding all the keywords that I think I might use to search for something later – I think of my tags as a “search engine in reverse”. If I think I might look for a note in three different ways, I give it three different tags.
I create lot of different tags – my primary vault has at least 800. The distribution is very skewed, with maybe 50 tags that I use a lot, and then a long tail of tags that are only used a handful of times. This might seem messy to some people, but it works for me – even if a tag is only used once or twice, it’s still useful for searching.
I use prefixes as a way to namespace some of tags, like aws/amazon-s3
and python/pip
. This helps keep my list of tags somewhat organised, but otherwise it’s a bit of an inconsistent mess. e.g. I don’t have any rules about singular vs plural
I have different tags in each of my vaults, but I try to use the same tag in both places if it means the same thing.
I have a handful of top-level folders, and I put most notes in folders. Both of my vaults have the same set of top-level folders.
I try not to keep too many notes in my root – it’s mostly brand new notes, stuff I’m actively working on, or notes I refer to frequently. When I’m finished working on a note, I move it into a folder.
The folders I use:
Attachments for images, audio, PDFs, and so on. Anything that isn’t a text file. I use my image gallery plugin to browse the contents of this folder.
Ideas for anything I think of that I might like to do in the future, but don’t want to do right now. This includes ideas for projects, books I might like to read, half-finished blog posts, and more. I like being able to capture my ideas and then get them out of the way, without committing to finishing them.
Some of these entries are very long-lived, and I’ve built them up over multiple years. I’ll capture the initial spark of something, then go back and add more details as I think of them. This accumulation of thoughts can be useful if I ever go back and actually do the thing.
Journal is for all of my journal entries, or anything I’ve done that’s bound to a particular time (DIY, craft projects, holiday plans, and so on).
I have per-year folders to keep it manageable, but there’s not a lot of consistency. I have my journal entries going back as far as 2009, and I’ve had quite a few different approaches to journaling in that time!
People is for per-person notes. These files are pretty small, and usually exist for easy linking rather than for in-depth notes. For example, it’s much easier to search for all journal entries linked to “Jane Smith” than it is to search for all instances of the word “Jane”.
Occasionally I do put bits of info in somebody’s note that isn’t bound to a specific journal entry – food allergies, the names of their kids, gift preferences, and so on.
Reference is for detailed notes on anything outside my vault – books I’ve read, videos I’ve watched, podcasts I’ve listened to. I have subfolders for the different types of media.
Snippets is for little bits of information I want to save. A cool tweet, an interesting word, some trivia fact.
At least to me, it’s always obvious which of these folders a note belongs in. This has been a constant feature of all my folder setups – I want to be able to file notes immediately, without thinking. I don’t want to be wondering where a particular note should be stored on a day-to-day basis.