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Sliding Panes (Andy Matuschak Mode) Obsidian Plugin

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Sliding Panes (Andy Matuschak Mode) as a plugin for Obsidian.

Screenshot

This plugin changes the way panes in the main workspace are handled — inspired by the UI of Andy Matuschak's notes.
Instead of shrinking the workspace to fit panels, the panels will remain a fixed width (but resizable) and stack so you can scroll between them. Note headers are rotated and added to the left of the pane like a spine (optional), and will stack up as you scroll (also optional), allowing easy navigation between them.

(Note: To open links in a new pane in Obsidian, ctrl/cmd click them)

Other Features

  • Note headers stack up on the right as well as the left.
  • Changing an active pane scrolls that pane into view.
  • Togglable without having to copy CSS into your theme.
  • Togglable features, such as the rotated headers and stacking

Settings

  • Toggle Sliding Panes - Turns sliding panes on or off globally (also available via command/hotkey)
  • Leaf Width - The default width of a single pane
  • Toggle rotated headers - Rotates headers to use as spines (also available via command/hotkey)
  • Swap rotated header direction - Swaps the direction of rotated headers (also available via command/hotkey)
  • Toggle stacking - Panes will stack up to the left and right (also available via command/hotkey)
  • Spine Width - The width of the rotated header (or gap) for stacking

Compatibility

Custom plugins are only available for Obsidian v0.9.7+.

The current API of this repo targets Obsidian v0.9.7.

Notes

This is all very expermental at the moment, so parts might not work, etc.

It still gets a bit slow if you're loading a lot of documents, so try not to load too many at once.

Installation

From within Obsidian

From Obsidian v0.9.8, you can activate this plugin within Obsidian by doing the following:

  • Open Settings > Third-party plugin
  • Make sure Safe mode is off
  • Click Browse community plugins
  • Search for "Sliding Panes" (or "andy mode" 😉)
  • Click Install
  • Once installed, close the community plugins window and activate the newly installed plugin

Updates

You can follow the same procedure to update the plugin

From GitHub

  • Download the Latest release
  • Extract the sliding-panes-obsidian folder from the zip to your vault's plugins folder: <vault>/.obsidian/plugins/
    Note: On some machines the .obsidian folder may be hidden. On MacOS you should be able to press Command+Shift+Dot to show the folder in Finder.
  • Reload Obsidian
  • If prompted about Safe Mode, you can disable safe mode and enable the plugin. Otherwise head to Settings, third-party plugins, make sure safe mode is off and enable Sliding Panes from there.

Security

Third-party plugins can access files on your computer, connect to the internet, and even install additional programs.

The source code of this plugin is available on GitHub for you to audit yourself, but installing plugins into Obsidian is currently a matter of trust.

I can assure you here that I do nothing to collect your data, send information to the internet or otherwise do anything nefarious with your system. However, be aware that I could, and you only have my word that I don't.

Development

This project uses Typescript to provide type checking and documentation.
The repo depends on the latest plugin API in Typescript Definition format, which contains TSDoc comments describing what it does.

Note: The Obsidian API is still in early alpha and is subject to change at any time!

If you want to contribute to development and/or just customize it with your own tweaks, you can do the following:

  • Clone this repo.
  • npm i or yarn to install dependencies
  • npm run build to compile.
  • Copy manifest.json, main.js and styles.css to a subfolder of your plugins folder (e.g, <vault>/.obsidian/plugins/sliding-panes-obsidian/)
  • Reload obsidian to see changes

Alternately, you can clone the repo directly into your plugins folder and once dependencies are installed use npm run dev to start compilation in watch mode.
You may have to reload obsidian (ctrl+R) to see changes.

Pricing

Huh? This is an open-source plugin I made for fun. It's completely free. However, if you absolutely have to send me money because you like it that much, feel free to throw some coins in my hat via the following:

GitHub Sponsors Paypal

Version History

3.1.1

  • Quick fix for rightmost header hiding and extra scrollbar

3.1.0

  • Update the link suggestion container position (thanks again, @erichalldev)
  • Add the option (and command palette command) to turn stacking off (i.e. slide-off mode, like the v1 of Andy's Mode CSS)
  • Add the option (and command palette command) to make the rotated header titles face the other direction
  • Add a command palette command to toggle rotated headers
  • Allow pane resizing (except the last pane, because it doesn't have a handle currently)
  • Fix an issue with switching to off-screen panes not animating correctly (can still jump without animation if you switch too far too quickly)

3.0.2

  • Add a setting to disable rotated headers
  • Update focusLeaf to scroll just far enough to make a leaf fully visible if it's out of view to the right (thanks @erichalldev)
  • Activate adjacent leaf when active leaf is closed (thanks again, @erichalldev)
  • Close leaves which happen to have a file open that is deleted

v3.0.1

  • Quick fix to prevent the plugin from affecting sidebars

v3.0.0

New Features (vs the CSS-only version)

  • Note headers stack up on the right as well as the left.
  • Changing active pane scrolls that pane into view.
  • Togglable without having to copy CSS into your theme.

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Andy Matuschak Mode as a plugin

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