April 9, 2026

Note graph (beta): scripture links across your library

We shipped an interactive graph for signed-in users: nodes are notes, edges mean shared passage metadata. Here is how to use it and what beta means.

Note graph (beta): scripture links across your library

We added a note graph so you can see your library at a glance. It is labeled beta because we expect to tune layout, performance, and polish as more people use it.

Who can use it

You need a free account. After you log in, open Graph from your notes list or Note graph from the dashboard.

What the lines mean

Edges are not wiki links between note titles. A line appears when two notes each contain scripture inserts that match under the same rules as the cross-reference panel (including USFM overlap when both sides have structured biblePassage nodes, and reference-string fallback for older content).

Notes without passages, or with no overlaps, still show up as dots without lines.

What you can do in the view

  • Pan and zoom the canvas.
  • Find note jumps to a title match and selects it.
  • Min. link strength hides weaker edges so busy graphs calm down.
  • Click a note to select it without moving the layout. Use Focus neighborhood for a local view (1 to 3 hops), then Show all notes to reset.
  • Double-click a node or use Open note to edit that note.

Why we call it beta

The graph is built from your note JSON with a full-library scan, like other scripture features today. That is fine for typical personal use, but we want room to improve before we treat it as a finished “map of everything” experience.

Read the marketing overview at Note graph or jump in from your account.

"Your word is a lamp to my feet, and a light for my path." (Psalm 119:105, WEB)