Organizing Existing Notes
Already have notes in Chunk? This workflow shows you how to structure and connect them using tags, wiki-links, Maps of Content, and the Knowledge Graph.
Tag and categorize
Start by reviewing your existing notes and adding tags. Use broad categories first — "Work", "Personal", "Study", or project names. Tags help you filter your notes list and find things quickly. You can add or change tags at any time from the note editor.
Add wiki-links between related notes
Go through your notes and look for connections. When one note references a concept that's covered in another note, add a wiki-link by typing [[ and selecting the target note. Even a few links per note will create a useful web of connections.
Tip: Don't try to link everything at once. Add links naturally as you read and edit your notes over time.
Create Maps of Content
A Map of Content (MOC) is a note that serves as an index for a topic. Create a note called something like "MOC: Machine Learning" and fill it with wiki-links to all your related notes on that subject. MOCs act as entry points into clusters of knowledge.
Tip: MOCs are just regular notes with lots of wiki-links. No special setup needed.
Use the Knowledge Graph to find gaps
Switch to Graph View to visualize your entire note collection. Look for isolated notes (no connections) — these might need wiki-links. Look for dense clusters — these are your strongest topic areas. The graph reveals the structure of your knowledge at a glance.
Save key notes to Documents
For your most important notes, save them to Documents using the hard drive icon in the editor. This indexes them for AI search, so Chunk can reference your notes when you chat. Update the document version anytime after editing the note.
Tip: This is especially useful for reference notes, cheat sheets, and MOCs that you want the AI to be able to cite.