Interwingled Information Language
Hypertext on Hypergraphs
Multidimensional Mind Mapping
Cognitive Cartography
A DSL for Data Explorers
Strange Loop Language
Tangled Hierarchy Markup Language
Knowledge Graph Toolkit
Thinkable Type
ThinkableType is a way to represent concepts, ideas and information.
It's great at building knowledge graphs and aims to work the way you think.
It's simple. It's based on a hypergraph, which doesn't sound simple, but it is:
Ted Nelson,invented,HyperText
That's it, a series of connected ideas. Typically separated by a ,
or ->
Tim Berners-Lee -> invented -> WWW
What matters less is the syntax, and more that there are only two things:
- Symbols
- Connections
Together these form the building blocks of ThinkableType.
Current knowledge graphs limit how we think. They don't visualize information in the way it's actually shaped.
Mind Mapping tries to squeeze complex relationships into a 2D hierarchy—stripped of context, interconnections and intuition.
ThinkableType is not about creating a simplified view of some information in your head—it's about getting lost in the forest, discovering deep insights, and finding your way back.
Here is Think Machine, a frontend UI for the project.
To create a ThinkableType file, just create a CSV file with some connected ideas.
Ted Nelson,invented,HyperText
Tim Berners-Lee,invented,WWW
HyperText,influenced,WWW
This file gets read, parsed and then a knowledge graph gets created with all the proper connections.
Interconnections are a core idea—called interwingle. Interwingle means knowledge is deeply interconnected and there isn't a clean way to divide it up.
Connections, and other tools like PageRank, Text Similarity and LLMs, are all included to help you make sense of your data.
ThinkableType wants you to do the hard work of thinking—and then it will do everything it can to help you hit the high notes.
ThinkableType is a lot of things. It's a DSL, it's a parser, it's a hypergraph database, it's a text similarity vector search engine, it's an AI Research Copilot.
But at it's core, it's just a library — and getting started is easy.
Install from NPM:
npm install @themaximalist/thinkabletype
You can import an existing .csv
file
import ThinkableType from "@themaximalist/thinkabletype"
const thinkabletype = ThinkableType.parse("ancient_sumerians.csv");
// or specify a different separator
const thinkabletype = ThinkableType.parse("secret_research_project.csv", {
parse: {
delimiter: " -> "
}
});
You can also initialize with an existing list of nodes and connections (called Hyperedges).
const hyperedges = [
["Plato", "student", "Socrates"],
["Aristotle", "student", "Plato"]
];
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType({ hyperedges });
Or you can build up a file programatically
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType();
thinkabletype.add("Vannevar Bush", "author", "As We May Think");
thinkabletype.add("Ted Nelson", "invented", "HyperText");
thinkabletype.add("As We May Think", "influenced", "HyperText");
You can also build up a Hyperedge one symbol at a time.
const edge = thinkabletype.add("Vannevar Bush");
edge.add("invented");
edge.add("Memex");
Connections and visualizations are a core part of ThinkableType—so Force Graph 3D is supported out of the box.
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType({
hyperedges: [
["Hercules", "son", "Zeus"],
["Hercules", "son", "Alcmene"],
],
});
const data = thinkabletype.graphData(); // { nodes, links } for Force Graph 3D
In addition, an interwingle
parameter is available to control the interconnections of the graph.
Isolated
displays hyperedges exactly as they're entered, with no interconnections.
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType({
interwingle: ThinkableType.INTERWINGLE.ISOLATED,
hyperedges: [
["Hercules", "son", "Zeus"],
["Hercules", "son", "Alcmene"],
],
});
// hyperedges are displayed exactly as entered
const data = thinkabletype.graphData();
// Hercules -> son -> Zeus
// Hercules -> son -> Alcmene
Confluence
connects common parents.
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType({
interwingle: ThinkableType.INTERWINGLE.CONFLUENCE,
hyperedges: [
["Hercules", "son", "Zeus"],
["Hercules", "son", "Alcmene"],
],
});
// nodes shares common ancestors
const data = thinkabletype.graphData();
//
// / Zeus
// Herculues -> son
// \ Alcmene
//
Fusion
connects starts, ends and direct connections.
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType({
interwingle: ThinkableType.INTERWINGLE.FUSION,
hyperedges: [
["Plato", "student", "Socrates"],
["Aristotle", "student", "Plato"],
],
});
// start and end nodes are fused together
const data = thinkabletype.graphData();
// Aristotle -> student -> Plato -> student -> Socrates
When a hyperedge is two nodes long—it's treated as a direct connection.
A,B,C
1,2,3
B,2
In this case, B,2
says link every instance of B to every instance of 2. So the other two edges A,B,C
and 1,2,3
are linked together.
This is especially useful for making simpler connections than Bridge and can keep knowledge graphs structured as you intend.
Bridge
connects common symbols with a bridge.
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType({
interwingle: ThinkableType.INTERWINGLE.BRIDGE,
hyperedges: [
["Vannevar Bush", "author", "As We May Think"],
["Ted Nelson", "author", "Computer Lib/Dream Machines"],
["Tim Berners-Lee", "author", "Weaving the Web"],
],
});
// common symbols are connected through a bridge
const data = thinkabletype.graphData();
//
// Vannevar Bush -> author -> As We May Think
// |
// Ted Nelson -> author -> Computer Lib/Dream Machines
// |
// Tim Berners-Lee -> author -> Weaving the Web
These four views give you control in how to visualize your knowledge graph and control interconnections between your data.
As you scale up the interwingle
parameter, all the visualization layers start to combine. Using Fusion
automatically includes Confluence
. And using Bridge
automatically includes Fusion
and Confluence
. This lets you increase the complexity of the knowledge graph, step-by-step.
ThinkableType helps you find the most referenced symbols and connections by running PageRank
on your knowledge graph.
const thinkabletype = ThinkableType.parse(`A,B,C
A,B,D
A,B,E
A,C,Z`);
await thinkabletype.sync(); // syncs pagerank
thinkabletype.pageranks // { A: <num>, B: <num>, ... }
thinkabletype.pagerank("Z") // { A: <num>, C: <num>, ... }
Note, ThinkableType aims to work with very large knowledge graphs, so we keep expensive operations like PageRank
explicit and in the background, controlled through await thinkabletype.sync()
or await thinkabletype.syncPagerank().
ThinkableType can find similar symbols and hyperedges, not only by the explicit connections, but by the text similarity.
Using Embeddings.js and VectorDB.js, you can find hidden connections in your knowledge graph.
Note, both embeddings and vector search are local by default, but you can use embeddings from OpenAI
with a few config lines.
Find similar symbols in the knowledge graph, on any edge.
const thinkabletype = ThinkableType.parse(`Red,Green,Blue
White,Black,Gray`);
await thinkabletype.sync();
await thinkabletype.similarSymbols("Redish");
// [ { symbol: "Red": distance: 0.5 } ]
Find similar hyperedges based on symbols.
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType();
const edge1 = thinkabletype.add("Red", "Green", "Blue");
const edge2 = thinkabletype.add("Red", "White", "Blue");
const edge3 = thinkabletype.add("Bob", "Sally", "Bill");
await thinkabletype.sync();
await edge1.similar(); // [ Hyperedge("Red", "White", "Blue") ]
await edge2.similar(); // [ Hyperedge("Red", "Green", "Blue") ]
Searching in ThinkableType is easy, you can search by symbol, hyperedge or a partial hyperedge.
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType({
hyperedges: [
["Ted Nelson", "invented", "Xanadu"],
["Tim Berners-Lee", "invented", "WWW"],
["Tim Berners-Lee", "author", "Weaving the Web"],
// ...
],
});
thinkabletype.filter("invented").length; // 2
thinkabletype.filter("Tim Berners-Lee").length; // 2
thinkabletype.filter("Tim Berners-Lee", "invented").length; // 1
ThinkableType has suggest()
built in, which autocompletes any symbol or edge.
Using LLM.js, you can use any Large Language Model—like GPT-4, Claude, Mistral or local LLMs like Llamafile.
const options = {
llm: {
service: "openai",
model: "gpt-4-turbo-preview"
apikey: process.env.OPENAI_API_KEY
}
};
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType(options);
const hyperedge = thinkabletype.add("Steve Jobs", "inventor");
thinkabletype.suggest(); // ["iPhone", "Macintosh", "iPod", ... ]
This makes programatically expanding knowledge graphs with LLMs incredibly easy!
ThinkableType also has generate()
built in, which generates hyperedges based on
your prompt. This is a great way to expand your knowledge graph in a particular
direction.
Just like with AI Auto Suggest, you can use any LLM.
const options = {
llm: {
service: "openai",
model: "gpt-4-turbo-preview",
apikey: process.env.OPENAI_API_KEY,
},
};
const thinkabletype = new ThinkableType(options);
const hyperedges = thinkabletype.generate("Steve Jobs");
// Steve Jobs,Apple Inc,CEO
// Steve Jobs,NeXT,Founder
// Steve Jobs,Macintosh,Personal Computers
// Steve Jobs,iPad,Tablet Computing
// ...
ThinkableType ships with a command-line interfaces for searching and generating files.
> thinkabletype epic of gilgamesh
epic of gilgamesh,sumerian literature,ancient civilization
epic of gilgamesh,gilgamesh,enkidu,immortality,friendship
sumerian literature,cuneiform writing,mesopotamia
...
By default it writes to stdout, either copy and paste to a .csv
file or redirect the out
> thinkabletype mesopotamia > mesopotamia.csv
A language for ideas needs a structureless structure. That's exactly what Stephen Wolfram found hypergraphs to be while working on his Universal Theory of Physics project.
Ted Nelson created Zig Zag as a "hyperstructure" kit—a way to represent information in HyperText systems.
ThinkableType combines these ideas, using the hypergraph as the fundamental unit in the HyperText system.
ThinkableType is a lot closer to symbolic programming than iterative programming. In iterative programming, you describe every little step. In symbolic programming, you describe the high-level concepts. It's top-down rather than bottom-up.
Something magical happens with symbolic programming. Like a looking glass, "the program" is a reflection of the connected symbols. It's a lot like language. You have legalese and then you have poetry.
ThinkableType is not a programming language in and of itself—but this high-level connecting of ideas is creating a sum greater than it's parts.
ThinkableType is open source, and the file format is incredibly simple—just CSV files.
It's goal is to give you control over the knowledge and information in your life.
File over app is a philosophy: if you want to create digital artifacts that last, they must be files you can control, in formats that are easy to retrieve and read. Use tools that give you this freedom.
—Steph Ango (Obsidian Cofounder)
ThinkableType is under heavy development and still subject to breaking changes.
ThinkableType is currently used in the following projects:
MIT