A non-linear writing instrument.
  • Rust 91.4%
  • HTML 4.4%
  • CSS 2.7%
  • Shell 1.5%
Find a file
2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
.forgejo/workflows Merge branch 'ci-testing' 2026-03-08 01:19:44 -03:00
containers Drop 'latest' tag as a way of finding the newest tag 2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
docs/development Move roadmap to docs graph, minor docs edits 2026-01-07 11:14:32 -03:00
src Strip header from canonical licenses 2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
static Strip header from canonical licenses 2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
templates Embed assets into the binary 2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
tests Merge branch 'ci-testing' 2026-03-08 01:19:44 -03:00
.clippy.toml Replace hardcoded static files with a static endpoint 2026-01-17 16:09:51 -03:00
.gitignore Here goes something 2025-12-09 18:28:39 -03:00
.justfile Drop 'latest' tag as a way of finding the newest tag 2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
.rustfmt.toml Adopt and apply nightly rustfmt configuration 2026-02-16 16:19:27 -03:00
Cargo.lock Embed assets into the binary 2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
Cargo.toml Embed assets into the binary 2026-03-11 02:40:45 -03:00
LICENSE Here goes something 2025-12-09 18:28:39 -03:00
README.md Minor logging, docs and style tweaks 2026-01-12 14:45:37 -03:00

en

en is a tool to write non-linear, connected pieces of text and have their references mapped out as a graph of connected information.

It works by ingesting a TOML file containing your node specification and serving it as a website that allows nodes to be browsed, searched and listed in relation to each other or as a shallow tree of nodes.

Roadmap

For an outline of planned and completed features, see the roadmap.

Learn more

You can learn more and see what en looks like by visiting the homepage, which is rendered using en itself.