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Build structured pages that stay useful

Turn saved clips into working pages with body structure, clip blocks, drafts, and publish-ready sections.

Last updated: 2026-04-138 min read

Build structured pages that stay useful

What this page is for

Use pages when saved material needs to become something you can actually work from:

  • a memo
  • a working draft
  • a research brief
  • a reusable source page

What a good Thinkly page does

A good page is not a folder. It is a working surface with structure.

Inside one page you should be able to:

  • review the core clips
  • write and refine body content
  • keep source material attached
  • publish when it is ready

Step by step

  1. Start from a specific page title.
  2. Add only clips that support the same output.
  3. Write page sections directly in the body.
  4. Keep clip blocks close to the paragraph or section they support.
  5. Publish or export only when the page reads clearly without internal context.

UI reference

Page body

The body is where Thinkly shifts from storage to synthesis. Use headings and short sections. Treat clip blocks as support, not clutter.

Clip blocks

Clip blocks keep the original source material visible inside the page. They are useful when the reader needs to see evidence, not only your summary.

Drafts and generation

Use generation or drafts when you want help moving forward, not when the source material is still messy. The page should already have a strong direction.

Publish state

Publishing makes the page readable to someone outside your app session. Check the page title, section clarity, and clip relevance before you publish.

Common mistakes

  • Mixing several outputs in one page.
  • Letting clip blocks dominate the whole body.
  • Publishing a page that still assumes too much private context.

What to do next

If the page is turning into a reusable concept, open the Topic Wiki guide next. If you want relationships, open the graph guide.