Dendron is an open-source, local-first, markdown-based, note-taking tool. It's a personal knowledge management solution (PKM) built specifically for developers and integrates natively with IDEs like VS Code and VSCodium.
Most PKM tools help you create notes but slam into a wall retrieving them once your knowledge base reaches a certain size threshold. That threshold varies with the tool, but virtually everything stops working past 10k notes unless the user was extremely diligent about organizing their knowledge. Past this threshold, entropy wins and every query becomes a keyword search and scrolling through pages of results.
Dendron's mission is to help humans organize, find, and work with any amount of knowledge.
It not only helps you create notes but also retrieve them - retrieval works as well with ten notes as it does with ten thousand.
Dendron builds on top of the past five decades of programming languages and developer tooling. We apply the key lessons from software to the management of general knowledge. We make managing general knowledge like managing code and your PKM like an IDE.
Dendron aims to create a world class developer experience for managing knowledge.
Our goal is to provide a tool with the efficiency of Vim, the extensibility of Emacs, and the approachability of VS Code.
What this means:
- dendron features are text centric and composables
- dendron provides the lowest friction interface for working with your knowledge base
- dendron optimizes for efficiency, speed, and keyboard focused ux
- dendron comes with sane defaults and the ability to customize to your liking
- dendron can be extended along any dimension
Dendron extends markdown with structural primitives to make it easier to manage at scale and tooling on top to work with this structure.
Different knowledge bases require different levels of structure - a PKM used for keeping daily journals is different than a company wide knowledge base used by thousands of developers.
Dendron works with any level of structure, meaning you can take free form notes when starting out and gradually layer on more structure as your knowledge base grows more.
Dendron is both flexible and consistent. It provides a consistent structure for all your notes and gives you the flexibility to change that structure.
In Dendron, you can refactor notes and Dendron will make sure that your PKM is consistent throughout. This means that you have the best of both worlds: a basic structure for the organization but the flexibility to change it.
Dendron has hundreds of features. The following is a list of highlights.
- manage using git
- use git blame to see individual edits
- edit in anything that works on text files (eg. Vim)
- create diagrams using mermaid
- write math using katex
- embed notes (and parts of notes) in multiple places using note references
- one unified way to find and create notes
- quickly traverse and create new hierarchies
- ensure consistency for your knowledge base
- get autocomplete hints when creating new notes
- automatically apply common templates to notes on creation
- explore relationships using backlinks
- navigate to notes, headers and arbitrary blocks
- visualize your knowledge base using the graph view
- restructure your knowledge base without breaking links
- rename a single note or refactor using arbitrary regex
- rename and move individual sections within notes
- mix and match knowledge using vaults, a git backed folder for your notes
- use vaults to separate concerns, like personal notes and work notes
- publish vaults on git to collaborate and share knowledge with others
- export your knowledge base as a static (nextjs) site
- lookup locally and share globally with generated links
- manage what you publish using fine grained permissions on a per vault, per hiearchy and per note basis
- personal knowledge management (PKM)
- documentation
- meeting notes
- tasks and todos
- blogging
- customer relationship management
Interested in trying out Dendron? Jump right in with the Getting Started guide!
Dendron wouldn't be what it is today without our wonderful set of members and supporters.
We have a bunch of community events that we host throughout the week. You can stay up to date on whats happening by taking a look at our community calendar!
- View and register for upcoming Dendron Community Events on Luma
Dendron sends out a weekly newsletter highlighting:
- Latest release features
- Latest Dendron blog posts
- Insights from the Dendron Discord community
- RFC updates and GitHub discussions
- and more!
There are a variety of ways to connect with Dendron devs, contributors, and other members of the Dendron community:
- Join the Dendron on Discord
- Follow Dendron on Twitter (
@dendronhq
) - Checkout Dendron on GitHub
- Read the Dendron Blog
- Subscribe to the Dendron Newsletter
Dendron wouldn't be what it is today without help from the wonderful gardeners 👨🌾👩🌾
If you would like to contribute (docs, code, finance, or advocacy), you can find instructions to do so here
Dendron is distributed under the GNU AFFERO GENERAL PUBLIC LICENSE Version 3.
See LICENSE and NOTICE for more information.
The above license information is in regard to the Dendron software project in the
dendronhq/dendron
repository. When it comes to this repository, thedendronhq/dendron-site
repository of documentation, this is released under the MIT License