Nope, everything is 1, 2, 3, etc. There’s no hint of what they contain.
If filenames took a simple version of the “name” set for each link, it would work be perfect.
Obviously, it could be even more useful to someone using tags if that were included in the filename, too. But just knowing what the PDF has in it would make the files useful outside linkwarden (i.e. in a document manager or system search).
This makes me think of how Anytype stores files, it’s impossible to get your files from Anytype without exporting them through a tool in the software. If you delete Anytype, you have to reinstall it to get your files back the way you made them.
Showroom7561@lemmy.ca 8 months ago
Nope, everything is 1, 2, 3, etc. There’s no hint of what they contain.
If filenames took a simple version of the “name” set for each link, it would work be perfect.
Obviously, it could be even more useful to someone using tags if that were included in the filename, too. But just knowing what the PDF has in it would make the files useful outside linkwarden (i.e. in a document manager or system search).
Gutless2615@ttrpg.network 8 months ago
That seems like a bizarrely intentional obtuse choice
astraeus@programming.dev 8 months ago
This makes me think of how Anytype stores files, it’s impossible to get your files from Anytype without exporting them through a tool in the software. If you delete Anytype, you have to reinstall it to get your files back the way you made them.