My concept of evergreen notes is mainly inspired from [[https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z4SDCZQeRo4xFEQ8H4qrSqd68ucpgE6LU155C][Andy Matuschak's version]] in a way that focuses writing evergreen notes as a way of developing your knowledge.
As said from his note, an evergreen note focuses on evolving and being dynamic.
It should be taken with you as you develop more perspectives and more insight between a graph of concepts.
As such, with evergreen notes, you'll be doing more editing than creating as the web of notes widens.
An evergreen note should have the following principles:
- [[https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z4Rrmh17vMBbauEGnFPTZSK3UmdsGExLRfZz1][Evergreen notes should be atomic.]]
- [[https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z6bci25mVUBNFdVWSrQNKr6u7AZ1jFzfTVbMF][Evergreen notes should be concept-oriented.]]
- [[https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z2HUE4ABbQjUNjrNemvkTCsLa1LPDRuwh1tXC][Evergreen notes should be densely linked.]]
- [[https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z29hLZHiVt7W2uss2uMpSZquAX5T6vaeSF6Cy][Evergreen notes should form an associative ontology rather than an hierarchical taxonomy.]]
With that said, writing an evergreen note has no absolute rule.
Furthermore, you shouldn't focus too much on how to write effectively since [[https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z8V2q398qu89vdJ73N2BEYCgevMqux3yxQUAC][most note-taking practices are generally ineffective]].
Focusing on it is a distraction to the very objective of creating evergreen notes: [[https://notes.andymatuschak.org/z6cFzJWgj9vZpnrQsjrZ8yCNREzCTgyFeVZTb][developing insights]].