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Use Knowledge Graph to find and share connections

Use graph view to understand relationship clusters and publish a public graph when needed.

Last updated: 2026-04-136 min read

Use Knowledge Graph to find and share connections

What this page is for

The graph is for relationship-level work. Use it when a normal list view is no longer enough and you need to understand:

  • what clusters together
  • which topics connect two workflows
  • which pages are central
  • what to share with someone else as a map

How to use the graph well

The graph is strongest when you already have:

  • specific page titles
  • meaningful clips
  • topics that repeat across saved material

It is not a replacement for pages. It is the best way to see how pages and topics connect.

UI reference

Canvas

Use the canvas to spot hubs, isolated nodes, and bridges between concepts. When a page sits in the middle of several topics, it is usually a high-leverage working page.

Search and focus

Search narrows the graph to the concept you care about. Focus mode is useful when you want to share only the immediate neighborhood around one node.

Node detail

Open node detail when you need the summary, source context, and linked items. The graph should help you decide where to drill in next.

Share

Use Share when you want a public read-only graph link. This is useful for sending a research map, topic cluster, or focused relationship view.

Common mistakes

  • Expecting graph view to replace page editing.
  • Sharing the full graph when a focused graph would be easier to understand.
  • Reading isolated nodes as important when they may just be under-developed material.

What to do next

If you need new material to keep strengthening the graph, open the AutoClip guide next.