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Turning Obsidian into My Perfect Writing App
October 24, 2022
by [14]Mike Schmitz
NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month) is right around the corner, and if
youre looking for a great tool to help you hit your writing goals, there are
lots of great options available.
In this article, I want to make the case for using [15]Obsidian by showing you
how to turn it into a powerful writing environment using a few essential
plugins.
[svg][obsidianwr]
But Isnt Obsidian a Notes App?
Thats what I thought when I first started using it a couple of years ago. I
was hoping it would help me make connections between my notes and help inspire
some new ideas. But over time, I fell in love with it as a writing tool. In
fact, every article Ive written in the last 2 years has been written in
Obsidian.
What makes Obsidian great as a writing tool is how much you can customize it
using third-party plugins. The number of plugins continues to grow (676 as of
this writing), and with Obsidian recently launching version 1.0, the app shows
no signs of slowing down any time soon.
My Journey Away from Ulysses
Let me get this out right now: Ulysses is an incredible writing app.
Its just not for me for a couple of specific reasons.
First, publishing to the web isnt quite as easy as it should be with Ulysses.
It does give you the ability to publish straight to WordPress, and you can even
update blog posts from Ulysses now — if you can get it to connect to your
custom WordPress blog.
When this broke for me, I started digging in to how to fix it and quickly came
across weird plugins and settings for modifying XMLRPC. And unfortunately, I
could never get it functioning again. I fully understand its something on my
domains, but the “simple instructions” didnt work for me, and even as a web
developer I didnt feel comfortable digging too far into this.
Which meant I was stuck copying and pasting into WordPress.
And because Ulysses doesnt use standard Markdown, that meant I had to “export”
my text first. This works, but adds a few extra clicks (or taps in iOS) in
order to get my text out of my writing app. Combine that with the fact that
Ulysses has some weird Markdown formatting that never quite clicked for me in
the first place, and I was left looking for a straight Markdown-based text
editor.
Obsidian fits that description perfectly. Its simple, uses plain text files,
provides inline formatting, and supports standard Markdown. Its everything
Ive ever wanted in a plain text editor.
But there are a few additional settings and plugins you can use to make it even
better as a writing app.
Obsidian Settings
First, lets look at some of the settings.
To access these settings, click the gear icon in the lower-left corner and then
select Editor from the Settings sidebar.
The defaults are actually pretty good, but heres the key settings you want if
youre going to use Obsidian for writing:
• Make sure that Auto pair Markdown syntax is toggled ON. This creates both
symbols and places the cursor in the middle, making it easier to create
italicized or emphasized text.
• Make sure Smart indent lists is toggled ON. This makes it easier to create
bulleted and numbered lists quickly, automatically adding the next bullet
when you hit the Return key.
• Make sure that Fold heading and Fold indent are toggled ON. This creates
carats for Markdown headers as well as indented text, adding some cool
outliner-inspired features that make it easy to fold up text in large files
and focus on the text you want.
There are a bunch of other settings you can customize, but many of them are
simply personal preference. These are the important ones.
Once you have your settings, its time to move on to the plugins.
Obsidian Core Plugin Settings
There are two types of plugins in Obsidian: Core plugins that ship with the
app, and Community plugins that you can install to extend the functionality of
Obsidian. Were going to look at the Core plugins first.
Here are my recommendations for modifying the Core plugins:
• Make sure that Backlinks and Outgoing Links are both toggled ON. These are
sections available in the right sidebar that show all of the notes that
link to the active note and all of the notes linked to from the active note
respectively. (If youre new to the concept of connected notes, check out
[16]this article on using the local graph.)
• Make sure that Outline is toggled ON. This adds a tab in the right sidebar
that creates a table of contents for your note based on the Markdown
headers. This is helpful when you need to jump to a specific section of a
longer text as you can do so simply by clicking on the appropriate header
title.
• Turn the Word Count setting OFF. Word counts are important, but theres a
Community plugin that does this much better than the built-in word count
tool here.
Again, there are a bunch of options here that are personal preference, but
these are the important ones. Once you have these Core plugins set, its time
to really make Obsidian dance by adding some Community plugins.
Obsidian Community Plugins for an Upgraded Writing Experience
You can access the Community plugins public directory by going to Settings →
Community plugins → Browse once youve toggled off Safe Mode. From there, you
can find plugins for just about anything, from [17]embedding tasks from Todoist
to [18]creating timeblocked daily plans to [19]creating kanban boards — all
based on your locally-stored plain text files using standard Markdown.
[svg][obsidianpl]
All of the plugin links I share below are Obsidian links (obsidian://
link-adress) that will open straight to the plug-in page if you have Obsidian
installed and running on your device.
Note that many of the plugins I will share here are 1:1 replacements for
standard features in Ulysses, so if you dont mind non-standard Markdown
formatting and dont run into the publishing issues that I did, maybe try that
instead. But if youre all in with Obsidian, here are the plugins I use to make
Obsidian my perfect writing app.
Better Word Count
The first plugin is called [20]Better Word Count. This replaces the built-in
word count core plugin, and it functions largely the same with one key
addition: when you highlight text, it shows the words/characters of the
highlighted text instead of the whole document.
[svg][obsidianbw]
Its not as good as the writing stats in Ulysses, but its good enough for me.
cMenu
If youre uncomfortable relying on your memory for Markdown formatting, [21]
cMenu is a third-party plugin that gives you a minimal text editor modal that
allows you to do things like bold, italicize, strikethrough, underline, and
toggle blockquotes.
[svg][obsidiancm]
If you dont like the default options, you can customize what shows up in the
modal by adding any of the Commands in your Obsidian library.
Reading Time
Another handy Ulysses feature is being able to see how long it will take to
read the text in the selected file. But you can add this feature to the status
bar using the [22]Reading Time plugin.
[svg][obsidianre]
This one is pretty straightforward — just install it and turn it on and youll
see the reading time at the bottom of your Obsidian window. You can customize
your reading speed in the settings for the plugin.
Footnote Shortcut
If you use footnotes a lot, they can be a bit of a pain to create with standard
Markdown. Its a lot easier with the [23]Obsidian Footnotes plugin.^[24]1
[svg][obsidianfo]
Once installed, you can find it in the Command Palette and with the hotkey:
Footnote Shortcut: Insert and Navigate Footnote. You can customize the hotkey
by going to Settings → Hotkey and searching for Footnote, which will then
insert the appropriate Markdown and navigate to the bottom of the note where
you can insert the text for your footnote.
Focus Mode
The Obsidian interface can be a little distracting when youre trying to focus
on your words. Fortunately, the [25]Focus Mode plugin allows you to remove all
the distractions and focus on what youre writing.
[svg][obsidianfo]
Once the plugin is installed and active, just click the Toggle Focus Mode
button to hide the sidebars and status bar, and you can shift-click the button
to hide everything but the active writing pane.
Typewriter Scroll
[26]This plugin keeps the currently selected line in the middle of the screen
as you type. As you type, the focus moves from the current section to the next
section by moving the rest of the page in the background, much like an
old-fashioned typewriter.
[svg][obsidianty]
Theres even a Zen Mode option that grays out the background text to help you
focus on the line that you are currently writing.
Novel Word Count
If you are aiming to write a book (fiction or non-fiction), you probably have a
total word count in mind. [27]Novel Word Count shows you the number of words
that a document or folder contains in the sidebar so you can keep track of your
long-form writing progress.
[svg][obsidianno]
You can also use pages, characters, date created, and date updated (as well as
a few different combinations) that can be configured in the plugin settings
once you turn it on.
Conclusion
Obsidian is much more than just a notes app, and might be the perfect writing
tool for you if you want to:
1. Store your plain text files locally
2. Use something that supports standard Markdown
3. Gives you the flexibility to craft your writing environment
Obsidian may not be for everyone, but since its completely free to start,
theres no reason not to give it a spin.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━
1. Since its an Obsidian Command, you could also add this as a button to the
cMenu plugin mentioned above. [28]↩
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[49]Our First Look at Apples New Journal App
Lets take a look at Apples new Journal app for iPhone and how it stacks up to
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[51]Tracking Important Events with Up Ahead, Time Blocking Methods, and More
Catch up on what we published this week, including a look at Up Ahead for
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[53]Up Ahead Lets You Track the Important Things in Life
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[55]The Power of Focus Themes
One of the most important concepts to learn as you figure out your 2024 plans
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everything you want." [Free Workshop this Monday] [56]»
[57]The CEO Who Had No Goals (Video)
I recently heard a surprising admission from a very successful CEO. [58]»
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References:
[1] https://thesweetsetup.com/
[2] https://thesweetsetup.com/colophon/
[3] https://thesweetsetup.com/training/
[4] https://thesweetsetup.com/blog/
[5] https://thesweetsetup.com/my-account
[6] https://thesweetsetup.com/turning-obsidian-into-my-perfect-writing-app/#
[7] https://thesweetsetup.com/category/mindfulness/
[8] https://thesweetsetup.com/category/workflows/
[9] https://thesweetsetup.com/category/sweet-setup-interview/
[10] https://thesweetsetup.com/category/quick-tip/
[11] https://thesweetsetup.com/turning-obsidian-into-my-perfect-writing-app/#
[14] https://thesweetsetup.com/author/mikeschmitz/
[15] https://obsidian.md/
[16] https://thesweetsetup.com/the-power-of-obsidians-local-graph/
[17] https://thesweetsetup.com/syncing-embedding-tasks-from-todoist-in-obsidian/
[18] https://thesweetsetup.com/timeblocking-in-obsidian/
[19] https://thesweetsetup.com/my-obsidian-based-kanban-writing-workflow/
[20] obsidian://show-plugin?id=better-word-count
[21] obsidian://show-plugin?id=cmenu-plugin
[22] obsidian://show-plugin?id=obsidian-reading-time
[23] obsidian://show-plugin?id=obsidian-footnotes
[24] https://thesweetsetup.com/turning-obsidian-into-my-perfect-writing-app/#fn-132252:1
[25] obsidian://show-plugin?id=obsidian-focus-mode
[26] obsidian://show-plugin?id=cm-typewriter-scroll-obsidian
[27] obsidian://show-plugin?id=novel-word-count
[28] https://thesweetsetup.com/turning-obsidian-into-my-perfect-writing-app/#fnref-132252:1
[29] https://twitter.com/thesweetsetup
[30] https://thesweetsetup.com/feed
[31] https://thesweetsetup.com/newsletter/
[41] https://thesweetsetup.com/training/
[42] https://thesweetsetup.com/accelerator/
[43] https://thesweetsetup.com/accelerator/
[44] https://thesweetsetup.com/things/
[45] https://thesweetsetup.com/things/
[46] https://thesweetsetup.com/training/?utm_source=training_sidebar_link&utm_medium=sidebar&utm_campaign=sidebar_att
[47] https://thesweetsetup.com/training/
[48] https://thesweetsetup.com/blog/
[49] https://thesweetsetup.com/our-first-look-at-apples-new-journal-app/
[50] https://thesweetsetup.com/our-first-look-at-apples-new-journal-app/
[51] https://thesweetsetup.com/tracking-important-events-up-ahead-timeblocking-more/
[52] https://thesweetsetup.com/tracking-important-events-up-ahead-timeblocking-more/
[53] https://thesweetsetup.com/up-ahead-lets-you-track-the-important-things-in-life/
[54] https://thesweetsetup.com/up-ahead-lets-you-track-the-important-things-in-life/
[55] https://thesweetsetup.com/the-power-of-focus-themes/
[56] https://thesweetsetup.com/the-power-of-focus-themes/
[57] https://thesweetsetup.com/the-ceo-who-dad-no-goals-video/
[58] https://thesweetsetup.com/the-ceo-who-dad-no-goals-video/
[59] https://thesweetsetup.com/
[60] https://thesweetsetup.com/colophon/
[61] https://thesweetsetup.com/training/
[62] https://thesweetsetup.com/contact/
[63] https://thesweetsetup.com/blog/
[64] https://thesweetsetup.com/newsletter/
[65] https://thesweetsetup.com/my-account
[66] https://shawnblanc.net/
[67] https://thefocuscourse.com/
[68] http://toolsandtoys.net/
[69] http://inkblotmediagroup.com/
[70] http://mondaybynoon.com/