Learn Freeplane

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Introduction

Freeplane is a free and open source software application that supports thinking, sharing information and getting things done at work, in school and at home. The software can be used for mind mapping and analyzing the information contained in mind maps.

Mind mapping is considered a brainstorming technique out of which we obtain desired results or even extraordinary ones. This is why we must show our ideas to our mind map readers and help them understand what we were imagining while designing it. We can show the results in different ways, in order to make it look more appealing as well as profitable, according to the type of target audience that we are aiming at.

Educators consider mind mapping a good approach for supporting students with organizing ideas; they also find it a great asset for teaching. It is a great tool to organize the thought processes of their students when writing, due to the fact that the teacher only presents the basic content and it is the student who writes it in an organized way. However, the mind map should be comprehensive, well designed, and readable, in order to achieve its goal.

Educational application and relevance

Freeplane is an open source for educational use.

Version

Stable release 1.5.18 (December 7, 2016.

Preview release 1.5.18 (December 7, 2016;

Configuration

No need to configure
To Open from the desktop menu select Applications > Office > Freeplane.

Overview of Features

    • Note taking with freely positionable, unconnected nodes (post-it’s);
    • Ordering ideas (nodes) into a hierarchy connected by lines (edges);
    • Classifying nodes with metadata (attributes) and style types (system styles, user defined styles, level styles);
    • Grouping nodes with visual containers (clouds) and accolade (summary node);
    • Connecting nodes with dynamic links, free lines (connectors) and labels;
    • Automatically styling nodes (with a bubble, color, edge type, etc.) according to hierarchical level and content (conditional styles, automatic edge color, level styles);
    • Structuring nodes in terms of content (text, scientific formula, calculation, icon, image and hyperlink) and presentation area (core, details, notes, attributes, images and tooltip);
    • Changing views by hiding content (folding branches, filtering, roll-up of details and hiding extensions in tooltip), finding, scrolling and navigating;
    • Tasking with calendar and reminders;
    • Password protecting of whole map and of individual nodes with DES encryption;
    • Ease of use with inline- and dialog editors, object oriented main menu, context menu’s, multi-language support, spell checker, properties panel, drag& drop functionality, hot keys, options for batch execution, publishing, sharing and selectable preferences;
    • Approximate Search (similarity search) which allows to find search terms in a text, even if there is no exact match (e.g. "setup" = "set up" or "flie" = "file").
    • Support for LaTeX formulae underneath/in nodes
    • Easy extension of functionality with add-ons and home made scripts;
    • Integration with Docear academic literature suite;
    • Extensive support through Wiki and Forum; and tutorial and documentation in the form of a mind map.

Other similar applications

Freemind

Development and community help

Working with the application

Functionalities

Freeplane main page new.png FreeMind 2 Save as Window.png
Step 1 - Once Freeplane is open you will see a window like this.

The new mind map is the root node and you can give it any name you want. The name of this root node will be the name of the mind map. Once you have given it a name, you can save the mind map.

Step 2 - Once you click on save, you will see a window like this.

You can save the folder you want to select the folder you want to save it on. Here the mind map is named Food and is saved under home/ranjani/Documents

FreeMind 3 Insert Child nodes.png Food details.png
Step 3 - Now you see that the mind map is named Food and the root node is called Food. To insert other words that are connected, you can enter them as child nodes. To enter these nodes, you can use the "Enter" key or "Insert" key after selecting the node to which the child nodes must be added. Here, the child nodes have been added after selecting the node "Food". The child nodes added are called sibling nodes and the main node is called parent node. Step 4 - You can keep adding child nodes to any node. For example you can add child nodes to the node called environment by selecting and using "Insert" key. You can also add a sibling node to environment by selecting the node environment and using "Enter" key. "Plants" and "Animals" are child nodes for "environment" and "agriculture" is sibling node for "environment.
Food link.png Food freeplane open.png
Step 5 - When you discuss concepts, we notice that sometimes concepts are connected, and we want to link them to study in detail. For doing this we can add a graphical link (an arrow) to connect two nodes.

To do this select two nodes and select Insert Option from the menu bar, and add graphical link. You can click on the arrow and move it around.

Step 6 - We will also see that sometimes these concepts are very large and we may want to create a new mind to study them. For example, in this mind map we may want to create a new mind map called agriculture to study. After we create a new mind map called agriculture, we can insert a "file link" to open the new mind map when the node "agriculture" is clicked. To do this, we click on node called agriculture and click on "Insert". Under Insert, click on "Hyperlink - File chooser". This will open a window from where you can select the document name to be opened. This can be a mind map. The file can be a picture or video also.
Food hyperlink.png Food note panel.png
Step 7 - We can also insert weblinks to any node for additional information. To do this, you select the node to which additional information is to be added and click on "Insert". Under Insert, click on "Hyperlink - Text field". It will open a window in which you can enter the hyperlink manually. Step 8 - You can also add notes to a node to add more description to a node. To do this, you need to go to "View" and select "Note Window".

This will open a box where you can enter text. You can adjust the size of this box. To enter a note, select a node and enter the notes below in the note window.

Food note window summary.png
Step 9 - The completed mind map with links and notes will look like this below.

You can select the Format and Navigate to change colours, layout and also to move the nodes around. You can also export your mind map to Image or Text Document using File → Export As.

File formats for creation

Saving the file

Like in most applications, a file can be saved using the FILE – SAVE AS command, or by the shortcut key CTRL-S. Always give a meaningful file name, reading which you should get an idea of the file contents.

Export and publishing files

Like in most applications, a file can be exported to a PNG, JPEG and Libre office writer documents format.

Advanced features

1. Writing  

2. Inserting Graphics

3. Cloud

4. Blinkinhg

5. Colour

Installation

Method of installation Steps
From Ubuntu software Centre Steps : Application - ubuntu software centre - search box select and type (Freeplane)- install
From Terminal Steps - sudo apt-get install Freeplane
enter password
From the web Steps
Web based registration Steps

The application on mobiles and tablets

In Andorid Mobiles we can use this application through Freeplane reader

Ideas for resource creation

References

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freeplane

How to use template

{{subst:Explore_an_application}} on the page you create for your tool. Page Name should be "Learn ToolName"