Document Format
Create documents following workspace conventions and schemas defined in the Database system.
Overview
This workspace uses a structured Database system with well-defined schemas for different document types. All schemas, templates, and conventions are maintained in Database/Schemas/.
When to use this skill:
- •Creating new tasks, projects, meetings, people, companies, or bookmarks
- •Understanding how to structure document frontmatter
- •Learning when to create and update specific document types
- •Following workspace conventions for file naming and linking
Quick Start
- •Identify the document type you need to create (task, project, person, etc.)
- •Read the schema from
Database/Schemas/README.mdto see all available types - •Navigate to the specific schema folder (e.g.,
Database/Schemas/Task/) - •Read the schema README for complete specifications and examples
- •Use the template provided in that folder to create your document
Loading Schemas
Schema Index
Start by reading the schema index to understand available document types:
Database/Schemas/README.md
This index provides:
- •Complete list of available schemas
- •Quick reference table with locations and descriptions
- •Guidelines for creating new schemas
- •Common frontmatter patterns
- •Integration with Obsidian Bases
Individual Schemas
Each schema is documented in its own folder:
Database/Schemas/
├── Task/
│ ├── README.md # Complete schema specification
│ └── template.md # Ready-to-use template
├── Project/
│ ├── README.md
│ └── template.md
├── Person/
│ ├── README.md
│ └── template.md
├── Company/
│ ├── README.md
│ └── template.md
├── Meeting/
│ ├── README.md
│ └── template.md
├── Bookmark/
│ ├── README.md
│ └── template.md
└── Document/
├── README.md
├── template-research.md
└── template-prd.md
Schema Documentation Structure
Each schema README includes:
- •Location - Where documents of this type are stored
- •Filename Convention - How to name new files
- •When to Create - Triggers and scenarios for creating this document type
- •When to Update - What changes should trigger updates
- •Frontmatter Schema - Required and optional properties with types
- •Tag Conventions - Standardized tagging patterns
- •Viewing Documents - Available Obsidian Bases views
- •Best Practices - Common patterns and recommendations
- •Examples - Real-world examples with different configurations
Workflow for Creating Documents
Step 1: Load the Schema
Read the appropriate schema README:
Database/Schemas/[Type]/README.md
Example: For creating a task, read Database/Schemas/Task/README.md
Step 2: Copy the Template
Use the template as a starting point:
Database/Schemas/[Type]/template.md
Step 3: Fill in Properties
Follow the schema specification:
- •Add all required properties
- •Add optional properties as needed
- •Use correct property types (string, date, wikilink, array, enum)
- •Follow tag conventions
- •Use proper filename convention
Step 4: Save in Correct Location
Place the file in the appropriate Database folder:
Database/[Types]/Your-File-Name.md
Common Conventions
Frontmatter Requirements
All Database documents must include:
--- type: documenttype # Required: task, project, person, company, meeting, bookmark created: YYYY-MM-DD # Recommended: ISO 8601 date format tags: [...] # Recommended: for filtering ---
Linking Between Documents
Use wikilinks to create relationships:
# Link to a person assignee: "[[Database/People/Team-Member]]" # Link to a project project: "[[Database/Projects/AGI-Assistant]]" # Link to multiple items team: - "[[Database/People/Person-One]]" - "[[Database/People/Person-Two]]"
File Naming Patterns
Follow consistent naming based on document type:
- •Tasks: Descriptive title case:
Integrate-Zep-Memory.md - •Projects: Project name:
AGI-Assistant.md - •People: First-Last:
Alice-Smith.md - •Companies: Company name:
Placeholder-Labs.md - •Meetings: Date-based:
2026-01-15-Meeting-Title.md - •Bookmarks: Descriptive:
Claude-API-Docs.md
Date Formats
Always use ISO 8601 (YYYY-MM-DD):
created: 2026-01-15 due: 2026-01-31 meeting_date: 2026-01-20
Schema Extension
To create a new document type or modify existing schemas:
- •Read
Database/Schemas/README.mdsection "Creating a New Schema" - •Follow the documented structure for schema folders
- •Include README.md with complete specification
- •Provide template.md for easy document creation
- •Create corresponding
.basefile for Obsidian Bases views - •Update the schema index
Integration with Obsidian Bases
All schemas are designed to work with Obsidian Bases plugin:
- •Filter documents by frontmatter properties
- •Group by status, priority, person, project, etc.
- •Sort by dates, priorities, or custom fields
- •View as tables, kanbans, cards, or lists
- •Query related documents using relationship fields
Each document type has pre-configured views in Database/[Types].base files.
Best Practices
- •Always read the schema first - Don't guess frontmatter properties
- •Use templates - Start from provided templates to ensure consistency
- •Maintain relationships - Link related documents for bidirectional navigation
- •Update frontmatter - Keep metadata current (status, dates, counters)
- •Follow conventions - Use standardized naming, tagging, and linking patterns
- •Leverage queries - Use embedded Base queries to show related data inline
Examples
Creating a Task
- •Read
Database/Schemas/Task/README.md - •Copy from
Database/Schemas/Task/template.md - •Fill in required properties (type, status, priority, assignee, created)
- •Add optional properties (project, due, blocked_by)
- •Save to
Database/Tasks/Your-Task-Name.md
Creating a Project
- •Read
Database/Schemas/Project/README.md - •Copy from
Database/Schemas/Project/template.md - •Fill in required properties (type, status, priority, lead, total_tasks, completed_tasks)
- •Add optional properties (team, start_date, target_date, budget)
- •Save to
Database/Projects/Your-Project-Name.md
Creating a Person
- •Read
Database/Schemas/Person/README.md - •Copy from
Database/Schemas/Person/template.md - •Determine person type (team member, external contact, industry leader)
- •Fill in appropriate properties for that type
- •Save to
Database/People/First-Last.mdorTeam/First-Last.md
Troubleshooting
Q: Which schema should I use?
A: Read Database/Schemas/README.md - it has a table mapping use cases to schemas.
Q: What if none of the schemas fit?
A: Check if Database/Schemas/Document/ (free-form content) works, or propose a new schema following the extension guidelines.
Q: How do I create skills for workflows or automations?
A: Skills go in Database/Skills/ (not schemas). Use the /skill-creator skill to create user-editable skills. Add cron frontmatter field for scheduled execution (e.g., cron: "0 9 * * 1-5" for weekdays at 9am).
Q: How do I know what properties are required? A: Each schema README has a "Frontmatter Schema" section with required vs optional properties.
Q: Can I add custom properties? A: Yes, schemas define minimum required properties. You can add additional properties as needed.
Q: How do I link documents together?
A: Use wikilinks in frontmatter: project: "[[Database/Projects/Project-Name]]". See schema READMEs for relationship fields.
Summary
This skill helps you create properly formatted documents by:
- •Directing you to schema documentation in
Database/Schemas/ - •Explaining how to read and use schema specifications
- •Providing templates and examples
- •Enforcing workspace conventions
Always start by loading the schema index, then read the specific schema README for the document type you're creating.