A template in Trilium serves as a predefined structure for other notes, referred to as instance notes. Assigning a template to a note brings three main effects:
#isInheritable=false are inherited
by the instance notes, although only inheritable attributes are further
inherited by the children of the instance notes.A typical example would be a "Book" template note, which might include:
An instance note is a note related to a template note. This relationship means the instance note's content is initialized from the template, and all attributes from the template are inherited.
To create an instance note through the UI:
For the template to appear in the menu, the template note must have the #template label.
Do not confuse this with the ~template relation, which links
the instance note to the template note. If you use workspaces,
you can also mark templates with #workspaceTemplate to display
them only in the workspace.
Templates can also be added or changed after note creation by creating
a ~template relation pointing to the desired template note.
From a visual perspective, templates can define #iconClass and #cssClass attributes,
allowing all instance notes (e.g., books) to display a specific icon and
CSS style.
Explore the concept further in the demo notes, including examples like the Relation Map, Task Manager, and Day Notes.
Additionally, see default note title for
creating title templates. Note templates and title templates can be combined
by creating a #titleTemplate for a template note.