The Chronology plugin provides a sidebar calendar view that allows users to visualize, browse, and interact with their notes based on creation or modification dates. Users can view notes by day, week, month, or custom date ranges. The timeline visualization highlights when notes were created or modified, and users can opt for a simple list view instead. Notes grouped within the same time slot can be displayed together. The calendar tiles offer visual cues, showing the number of notes created or edited on each day. Clicking on note names opens them, and using Ctrl or Command-click opens notes in a new pane. This plugin also addresses issues with Obsidian Sync by using metadata to correctly identify the actual creation or modification dates of notes.
The Streams plugin lets you manage multiple parallel daily note streams, offering a flexible alternative to the default Daily Notes plugin. Each stream can be configured with its own folder and naming pattern, making it easy to separate contexts like work, school, or personal life. It includes a dedicated calendar per stream, quick access to the current day's note, and a full stream view to navigate note history. There's also a handy view for missing notes, helping you stay consistent with your journaling or tracking. Ideal for users who maintain different workflows within the same vault.
The Yearly Comparator plugin creates a calendar-style interface that displays daily notes from different years side by side. It extracts summaries based on a configurable headline keyword, defaulting to [DAILY_SUMMARY], and arranges them in columns for each year. Users can customise column widths and toggle the comparator view with a ribbon button. This makes it easy to track habits, compare past entries, and reflect on yearly changes in your journaling or daily note-taking workflow.
The Calendar Bases plugin turns Obsidian Bases results into a calendar so notes with date properties can be viewed where they belong in a month layout. It focuses on entries that already carry start dates and can also handle end dates when something spans more than one day. You can move items on the calendar to reschedule them and the plugin updates note frontmatter to match, which makes the view useful for planning as well as reviewing what is already in the vault. It also supports opening entries directly from the calendar and using context menus for related actions.