If the Hyperbole Koutliner and HyRolo functions prove insufficient fir this use 
case, there is Org-Journal:

 https://github.com/bastibe/org-journal/blob/master/README.org

And you can always embed Hyperbole links in Org files as well as Hyperbole is 
everywhere in Emacs once loaded.

-- Bob

On Jan 14, 2019, at 2:54 PM, Mats Lidell <[email protected]> wrote:

>> Xavier MAILLARD writes:fl
>> The question is not if it is possible but *how*, you, expert users of
>> Hyperbole would go with it.
> 
> I have never heard about the bullet journal until now. As I get if from 
> watching the 5 minute demo it is a way to organise your todo items. To me it 
> is not clear what is the best mapping from the method used in a notebook to 
> use with files and folders under Emacs. So it is hard to suggest how 
> Hyperbole would support that.
> 
>> This is something I do not understand: each time I want you to show me
>> how you would go for something with a *concrete* example, someone is
>> going with the DEMO meme.
> 
> Building you own personal information system requires that you understand 
> your tools and how they best can be put to use in achieving what you want.
> 
>> If it is pretty straightforward to do things, why do I feel totally
>> lost with Hyperbole ?
>> 
>> Please, I know time is precious but just a little help would be so
>> appreciated here. I just want to get started and experiment from
>> that. The DEMO does not permit such thing.
> 
> For a bullet journal system I would start experimenting with how the concepts 
> from the system can be mapped to files and folders. Can the calendar and 
> diary subsystem in Emacs be used for the different logs. Can implicit or 
> explicit buttons be used to make navigation between the different parts of 
> the system possible. Can modes, like kotl-mode or org-mode, provide the 
> support you want for supporting the lower level todo list concepts, etc.
> 
> Yours
> -- 
> %% Mats

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