* Applying doc changes based on reviews of past several documentation PRs
* Update docs
Clean up encryption docs
Clean up security docs
Delete export.md
Make new formats.md and add to sidebar. Also add all of the built-in formats, and examples for each.
Update mkdocs config for new files
* Fix broken docs links
* Correct incomplete sentences and markdown formatting issues
* Make overview a little more concise
* Update some command line arguments to latest version and make it a bit more concise
* Clean up unneeded TOML modifications and other scaffolding not needed for 3.9
* Revert "Clean up unneeded TOML modifications and other scaffolding not needed for 3.9"
This reverts commit 13b4266ed1
.
* Specify that brew is also the easiest way to install jrnl on Linux
* Update docs/security.md
* Update docs/recipes.md
* Doc updates:
- Remove import/export page, fold it into formats
- Rename security to privacy-and-security.md to avoid conflation w/ github security issues
- Various small cleanup and edits from PR review
Co-authored-by: Jonathan Wren <jonathan@nowandwren.com>
2.2 KiB
Overview
jrnl
is a simple journal application for the command line.
You can use it to easily create, search, and view journal entries. Journals are stored as human-readable plain text, and can also be encrypted using AES encryption.
jrnl
has most of the features you need, and few of the ones you don't.
Plain Text
jrnl
stores each journal in plain text. You can store jrnl
files anywhere,
including in shared folders to keep them synchronized between devices. Journal
files are compact (thousands of entries take up less than 1 MiB) and can be read
by almost any electronic device, now and for the foreseeable future.
Tags
To make it easier to find entries later, jrnl
includes support for inline tags
(the default tag symbol is @
). You can find and filter entries by using tags
along with other search criteria.
Support for Multiple Journals
jrnl
includes support for the creation of multiple journals, each of which
can be stored as a single file or as a set of files. Entries are automatically
timestamped in a human-readable format that makes it easy to view multiple
entries at a time. jrnl
can easily find the entries you want so that you can
read them or edit them.
Support for External Editors
jrnl
plays nicely with your favorite text editor. You may prefer to write
journal entries in an editor. Or you may want to make changes that require a
more comprehensive application. jrnl
can filter specific entries and pass them
to the external editor of your choice.
Encryption
jrnl
includes support for AES
encryption. See the
encryption page for more information.
Import and Export
jrnl
makes it easy to import entries from other sources. Existing entries can
be exported in a variety of formats.
Multi-Platform Support
jrnl
is compatible with most operating systems. You can download it using one
of a variety of package managers, or you can build from source.
Open-Source
jrnl
is written in Python and maintained by a
friendly community of open-source software
enthusiasts.