Documentation
Threads
When you have more to say, reply to a scribble — just like replying to a text.
Sometimes a single scribble isn't enough. You have a follow-up thought, a new angle, something to add. When that happens, you reply to it — just like you'd reply to a text message. That reply, and any that follow, become a thread.
How threads work
You write a scribble. Later, you think of something related. Instead of starting a new scribble from scratch, you reply to the original one. That's it — you now have a thread.
Threads give your scribbles continuity. You can revisit one days later and pick up right where you left off, adding new thoughts as they come.
When to use threads
- Working through an idea: You're thinking about something over multiple days — each new thought is a reply
- Research: You keep finding things related to a topic — reply to the original scribble each time
- Projects: Keep a running stream of thoughts, decisions, and notes
- Problem-solving: Work through a problem across multiple sessions, one reply at a time
Threads are optional. Not every scribble needs one. But when you're thinking about something over time, threads keep that thinking together naturally.