

Freeplane: the Swiss Army knife for your brain
source link: https://fedoramagazine.org/freeplane-swiss-army-tool-your-brain/
Go to the source link to view the article. You can view the picture content, updated content and better typesetting reading experience. If the link is broken, please click the button below to view the snapshot at that time.

A previous Fedora Magazine article covered tracking your time and tasks . Another introduced some mind mapping tools . There you learned that mind mapping is a visual technique for structuring and organizing thoughts and ideas. This article covers another mind mapping app you can use in Fedora: Freeplane .
Freeplane is a free and open source software application that supports thinking, sharing information and getting things done. Freeplane runs on any operating system that has a current version of Java installed.
Installing Freeplane
Freeplane is not currently packaged in the Fedora repositories, so you will need to install it from the project’s website.
- Go to the project’s Sourceforge site and click Download to download the file
- Open a terminal and extract the file (note that the version you download may be different): unzip freeplane_bin-1.8.5.zip
- Move the extracted contents to the /opt directory: sudo mv freeplane-1.8.5 /opt/freeplane
The configuration file is located in: ~/.config/freeplane . You can launch Freeplane by running /opt/freeplane/freeplane.sh from a terminal, but if you want to launch it from the desktop environment you can create a desktop file.
Open your favorite text editor and save the contents below to ~/.local/share/applications/freeplane.desktop .
[Desktop Entry] Version=1.0 Name=Freeplane Icon=/opt/freeplane/freeplane.svg Exec=/opt/freeplane/freeplane.sh Terminal=false Icon=freeplane Type=Application MimeType=text/x-troff-mm; Categories=Office; GenericName=Freeplane Comment=A free tool to organise your information Keywords=Mindmaps; Knowledge management; Brainstorming;
Next, update the desktop file database with update-desktop-database ~/.local/share/applications
Now you can launch Freeplane from your desktop environment.
Using Freeplane
At its first startup, Freeplane’s main window includes an example mind map with links to documentation about all the different things you can do with Freeplane.

Start your First Mind Mapping
You have a choice of templates when you create a new mind map. The standard template works for most cases. Start typing the idea and your text will replace the center text.
Press the Insert key to add a branch (or node) off the center with a blank field where you can fill in something associated with the idea. Press Insert again to add another node connected to the first one.
Press Enter on a node to add a node parallel to that one.
All keyboard shortcuts are in the Freeplane documentation .
Freeplane Plug-ins
Plug-ins can be used to extend and customize the use of the app. Two important ones are:
- Freeplane GTD+ : A generic task management add-on, with a special focus in supporting the Getting Things Done (GTD) methodology
- Study Planner : helps organize learning
To install a new add-on to Freeplane, find the add-on you want on the Freemind add-ons directory .
- Download the desired add-on
- In Freeplane, select Tools > Add-ons
- Click the Search button
- Find and select the file you just downloaded
- Click Install
- Depending on the add-on, you may have additional questions to answer
- Restart Freeplane to use the new add-on
Integrating mind mapping in your everyday life
Mind mapping is a very powerful method that can be of great assistance in many aspects of life.
- Learning Linux or any certification
- Learning a computer language
- Learning a human language
- Even earning a degree
Whatever the objective this will always help to keep the ideas together and organized.
Personally I’m earning a few Linux Professional Institute certifications. The image below shows a mind map I am creating as I go through the systemd materials.

Conclusion
Now you have a start on how you can use Freeplan. Freeplan gives you all the tools you’ll need to create great, vibrant, and useful mind maps. Share how you use it in the comments.
Recommend
-
48
A while back, there was a discussion comparing the performance of using the hashbrown crate (based on...
-
14
Yesterday I gave a talk at Strange Loop. I’ll try to write more about the conference and my favorite things about it later, but for now here’s the talk I gave. video transcript I mean “transcript” in a very loose sen...
-
8
We may earn a commission for purchases using our links. Learn more. Best Swiss Army Knife in 2021
-
14
[CPI] CPI-Helper Chrome Extension – Swiss Army Knife for Integrators Hello Integrators, it is a while since my last post. The CPI-Helper developed and I thought it is a good idea to sum up how the CPI-Helper ca...
-
11
Maghic: a Swiss army knife for GitHub Actions Workflow Maghic is a Swiss army knife tool for GitHub Actions Workflow. This is created for the GitHub Actions Hackathon:
-
6
Micro BGP Suite: The Swiss Army Knife of Routing Analysis
-
10
Show HN: A Swiss army knife for testing HTTP from the terminal
-
11
BUX: The Swiss Army knife for BSV app development Business 5 hours ago This week I had a chance to interview two...
-
9
A Swiss army knife in your IDE to 10x your dev lifeHi Product Hunters 👋 Myself, @ananddas, and @...
-
7
Creating Your Swiss Army Knife on Java Test Stack What are the exc...
About Joyk
Aggregate valuable and interesting links.
Joyk means Joy of geeK