Documentation Index
Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.getcore.me/llms.txt
Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.
What it is
The Scratchpad is the daily page CORE creates for you the moment you log in. One page per day, scoped to your local timezone. It’s a collaborative block editor (paragraphs, headings, lists, tasks, code blocks, tables) backed by Yjs, so it autosaves and survives across devices without a save button. You can use it like any notes app — but CORE is watching. There are two ways to put it to work.Two ways to engage CORE
Write a task with [ ]
Type
[ ] to start a checkbox item. The line becomes a real task the moment you stop typing — within ~2 minutes CORE picks it up and starts working on it. You’ll see its progress on the task’s badge right inside the scratchpad.Mention with @butler
Type
@butler followed by an instruction. After a short idle pause CORE reads the paragraph, runs your request, and replies as a comment attached to that paragraph — so the answer lives next to the question.How [ ] tasks work
A [ ] line isn’t just text formatting — it’s bound to a real Task in CORE the instant you create it.
- Typing
[ ](or using theTaskslash command) inserts a checkbox item, creates a Task row withsource: "daily", and links it to the scratchpad. - The text you type becomes the task title. Edits autosave to the task as you type.
- The task shows a badge with the next scheduled run time. Within roughly two minutes CORE claims it and starts execution.
- Click the task’s display id (e.g.
T-142) to jump to its full task page — descriptions, subtasks, activity log, runs. - Check the box to mark it Done. Uncheck to send it back to Todo.
- Delete the line and the task is cleaned up automatically — unless you’ve already typed a title or CORE has added context, in which case the task is preserved and you can find it on the tasks list.
How @butler mentions work
@butler is for answers you want inline. Type it followed by an instruction, keep writing, and a few seconds after you stop, CORE reads the paragraph, runs the request, and posts a comment on the paragraph with what it found or did.
A few things worth knowing:
- The mention text (minus
@butler) is what CORE sees as your instruction — keep the rest of the paragraph self-contained. - A comment shows up right on that paragraph; click it to expand the response and to open the underlying conversation if you want to follow up in chat.
- Each mention is processed once — the butler tracks which paragraphs it has already answered on, so editing unrelated text won’t re-trigger it. Edit the paragraph itself if you want a fresh reply.
@butler for things you want answered now and visible in context: “@butler what did Manoj say last time about the partnership?” / “@butler summarize my open Linear issues.”
Widgets in the side panel
Open the Widgets button in the daily header to dock a widget panel alongside the page. It’s the same widget system as the Overview page, but the layout is scoped to the Scratchpad — useful when you want a calendar, your inbox, or a Linear queue visible while you plan the day. Layouts persist per workspace. You can also embed a widget inline in the page itself: type/ and pick a widget from the slash menu to drop it as a block. Inline widgets carry their own per-block config and travel with whatever you write around them.
Why a daily page (not one big page)
A new page every day forces a clean break: yesterday’s open loops are still in memory and searchable, but they’re not staring at you. CORE treats today as the source of truth for what’s currently top-of-mind, which is what makes the[ ] and @butler flows feel light — CORE has a small, fresh surface to reason about instead of an ever-growing journal.