organice organizes Org files nicely!
Maintainability (Codeclimate):
An implementation of Org mode without the dependency of Emacs - built for mobile and desktop browsers.
organice lets you directly edit your org files online. It syncs with Dropbox and Google Drive and is optimized for mobile use.
At 200ok, we run an instance of organice at https://organice.200ok.ch, which is open for anyone to use! organice does not have a back-end (it’s just a front-end application, which uses either Dropbox or Google Drive as back-end storage). Hence no data stored on our servers.
organice supports a flexible mechanism for capturing using URL parameters. This mechanism integrates very nicely with the new Siri Shortcuts feature in iOS 12, allowing you to use Siri to execute capture templates.
You can use this sample Shortcut to get started with this right away in iOS 12. Open the link on your iOS device and click “Get Shortcut”. Then open up the Shortcuts app and edit the template by following the directions in the comments. Then record a Siri trigger and you’re good to go!
Alternatively, you can take advantage of the URL parameters yourself to build your own custom capture mechanism. All three of the following parameters are required and must be URL encoded:
captureTemplateName
: the name of the capture template to use. This capture template must already exist in Settings > Capture templates.captureFile
: the path (for Dropbox) or id (for Google Drive) of the file in which to execute the capture template.captureContent
: the content you’d like to capture. This content will be placed at the cursor position if specified in the capture template (with%?
), or at the end of the template if its not specified.
You can also specify additional custom variables for use in your
templates. They should be in the format captureVariable_<your custom
variable>
, and should also be URL encoded. In your capture template
they’d show up as %<your custom variable>
.
Here’s an example URL:
organice is built with React and Redux. It was bootstrapped with Create React App.
To install the necessary packages, run:
yarn install
To test against your own Dropbox account, you’ll need to
create a .env
file by copying .env.sample to just .env
.
cp .env.sample .env
To run the app, run:
yarn start
Note that logging in to Dropbox will only work if you’re running the
app on http://localhost:3000
, because all redirect URIs must be
specified ahead of time on the Dropbox developer console.
To configure your own application on Dropbox, please go here and then
configure this app key in the .env
file. Make sure to add your own
URL as Redirect URI
.
To configure your own application on Google Drive, please generate an API key as described on this page.
To make contributions to this repository, please install Prettier and
use it to format your code. This repository includes a
.prettierrc.json
with some configuration options that Prettier will
use automatically.
If you’re using Emacs, you can autoformat your source files: https://github.com/munen/emacs.d/#auto-formatting
Since organice is a front-end only application, it can easily be deployed to any server capable of serving a static application.
Please note: If you want the hosted application to connect to Dropbox or Google Drive, please read the section above on Synchronization back-ends.
First create the production build locally: yarn run build
Note: Creating a build will actually make your REACT_APP_*
variables
from the .env
file available under process.env
even though it’ll
be a front-end application.
And then upload to your web-server. Here’s a script for your convenience:
HOST='your_ftp_server_host'
USER='ftp_user'
PASSWD='ftp_password'
lftp $HOST <<END_SCRIPT
user $USER $PASSWD
mirror -R build/
quit
END_SCRIPT
exit 0
Assuming, you have an account and have installed the command line tools, deployment is as easy as:
heroku create
heroku config:set ON_HEROKU=1
git push heroku master
Whilst organice is a true SPA and therefore has no back-end
whatsoever, this does have an implication for deployment with regard
to routing. For routes like example.com/foo
to work, we need a
little something extra. Within the context of a running SPA, /foo
would be matched by the React Router and the proper page would be
rendered by JavaScript. When initially requesting a route like that
from the web server itself, the SPA is not running yet and the web
server itself wouldn’t find a file called /foo
. It would return
a 404. The whole topic is explained in depth in this SO answer:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/36623117
For https://organice.200ok.ch we’ve opted to:
- Use the modern HTML5 history API with BrowserRouter
- Not configure a back-end for isomorphic routing, because it would complicate application and deployment unnecessarily (SEO is a non-issue for organice)
- Use good old Apache Webserver for hosting the compiled static assets
Therefore configuring a catchall is as easy as setting up a
.htaccess
file in the root of the organice folder containing:
RewriteEngine On RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT}%{REQUEST_URI} -f [OR] RewriteCond %{DOCUMENT_ROOT}%{REQUEST_URI} -d RewriteRule ^ - [L] RewriteRule ^ /index.html [L]
Before starting work on organice, I did use Beorg and donated to it multiple times, because I was very happy to have a good option to access Org files on my phone with it.
The important differences to me are:
- organice is FOSS which is very much in the spirit of Org whilst Beorg is proprietary
- organice is web based, so there is no lock-in to a specific device or OS
- Beorg currently has better offline support
organice has a shared history with org-web. In fact, it is a friendly fork.
organice differs from org-web in that:
- It’s a community driven project. See our
- It has the commitment of a Swiss company behind it to continually
work on it.
- This company is 200ok llc: https://200ok.ch/
- It has many bug fixes (for example on parsing and exporting org files) compared to its ancestry.
- It continues to evolve independently with it’s own feature set.
- It is a project with equal focus on mobile as desktop browsers.
To see how organice differs from org-web, please consult the changelog which contains all changes since forking.
We are extraordinarily grateful to DanielDe the original creator! \_/\_
We forked the project, because we have different visions on how to go forward. He envisions a mobile only solution, we think it’s great to have organice be available to any browser to enable anyone on the go or any non-Emacs user easy access to Org files. Also, DanielDe thinks of org-web as his pet project whereas organice has the full power of 200ok llc behind it whilst building a strong self-sufficient community around it.
Thank you for all, DanielDe!
Illustration credit: Vecteezy.com