My unit of information is "the idea" and they all go into a single markdown file with a Markdown heading. The ideas are numbered and I use internal page GitHub anchor links to link between headings.
I had a WikidPad Wiki (python desktop based wiki software for Windows and Linux) that has 1000 entries. There was a number of pages that were long. But wikilinks in that wiki were often definitional (rather than explain inline, they had their own page) and multiple pages linked to them. The homepage of the wiki is a launching pad for links to other pages.
That wiki is a design of my ideal computer system, it's on GitHub as idea-wiki.
I think I prefer the all in one file thing because I don't need lots of very small files with very little information in. I also read over my notes regularly.
If you want value from your notes I feel you can read over them regularly.
I had a WikidPad Wiki (python desktop based wiki software for Windows and Linux) that has 1000 entries. There was a number of pages that were long. But wikilinks in that wiki were often definitional (rather than explain inline, they had their own page) and multiple pages linked to them. The homepage of the wiki is a launching pad for links to other pages.
That wiki is a design of my ideal computer system, it's on GitHub as idea-wiki.
I think I prefer the all in one file thing because I don't need lots of very small files with very little information in. I also read over my notes regularly.
If you want value from your notes I feel you can read over them regularly.