--- name: anywrite description: "Compiled CLI covering all 52 endpoints of the Anytype local API — objects, properties, tags, search, chat, files — one binary, no MCP server needed." category: productivity risk: critical source: community source_repo: Antheurus/anywrite source_type: community date_added: "2026-07-15" author: Antheurus tags: [anytype, cli, pkm, notes, api-integration, productivity, knowledge-management] tools: [claude, cursor, gemini, codex] license: "MIT" license_source: "https://github.com/Antheurus/anywrite/blob/main/LICENSE" --- # anywrite ## Overview `anywrite` is a single compiled Bun/TypeScript CLI for the [Anytype](https://anytype.io) desktop app's local HTTP API — **all 52 endpoints** across spaces, objects, properties, tags, types, templates, lists, chat, files, members, search, and auth — as one binary with zero runtime dependencies. It exists as a low-context alternative to Anytype's official MCP server: rather than exposing 52 always-loaded tools to every agent session, `anywrite` is a normal CLI wired as a skill that costs zero context until it's actually invoked, and is equally usable from a terminal or any script. ## When to Use This Skill - Use when the user mentions Anytype or asks to create, update, search, or organize notes, tasks, or PKM objects. - Use when working with Anytype spaces, properties, tags, types, templates, or lists (sets and collections). - Use when the user asks to upload files to a space, chat inside a space, or read/write structured objects programmatically. ## How It Works ### Step 1: Ensure Anytype desktop is running and authenticated The Anytype desktop app must be running locally (default `http://localhost:31009`). Authenticate once: ```bash ./dist/anywrite auth --status # shows configured yes/no and where the key came from ./dist/anywrite auth # challenge flow — a 4-digit code appears in the app ./dist/anywrite auth --code 1234 # non-interactive form of the same exchange ``` The key is written to `~/.anywrite/config.json` and is never printed by any command. ### Step 2: Invoke a resource + action ``` anywrite [positionals] [--flag value] ``` Resources: `spaces`, `objects`, `properties`, `tags`, `types`, `templates`, `lists`, `files`, `members`, `search`, `chat`, `auth`. Output is JSON by default; add `--pretty` for a human view, `--json` as an escape hatch for anything the typed flags don't model yet. `space`/`type`/`property` positionals accept a name or an id — names are resolved to ids automatically. ## Examples ### Example 1: Create and update an object ```bash ./dist/anywrite objects create --type task --name "Buy milk" ./dist/anywrite objects update --status "Done" ``` ### Example 2: Search and upload a file ```bash ./dist/anywrite search global --query "task" --types task ./dist/anywrite files upload --file ./image.png ``` ### Example 3: Read chat messages ```bash ./dist/anywrite chat messages --all ``` ## Best Practices - ✅ Pass names for `space`/`type`/`property` and let the CLI resolve them to ids. - ✅ Use default JSON output for scripting and `--pretty` for human review. - ✅ Reach for `--json` when a brand-new API field isn't yet covered by a typed flag. - ❌ Don't set an empty-string emoji `--icon`; omit the flag entirely instead. - ❌ Don't expect `lists add`/`remove` to work on sets — they only apply to collections. ## Limitations - This skill does not replace environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review. - Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, or safety boundaries are missing. - Bounded by the Anytype local API itself: no block-level editing (body is whole-markdown replace only), no member invite/role management, no template create/update/delete, no space deletion. - The object body field is named `--body` on create but `--markdown` on update. ## Security & Safety Notes - The API key is stored locally in `~/.anywrite/config.json` and is never printed by any command, including `auth --status`. - Config precedence at runtime: `ANYTYPE_API_KEY` env var, then `~/.anywrite/config.json`, then a read-only fallback to an existing `~/.anytype-cli/config.yaml`. - All operations target a locally-running Anytype desktop instance; no data is sent to third-party servers. - Delete is a soft archive everywhere and is idempotent — a repeated delete stays `200`, never `410`. ## Common Pitfalls - **Problem:** `lists add`/`remove` silently does nothing on a set. **Solution:** These only work on collections, not sets. - **Problem:** Re-uploading an identical file returns an existing object id instead of a new one. **Solution:** This is intentional — file upload dedupes by content hash. - **Problem:** Chat messages don't paginate like everything else. **Solution:** Chat paginates by cursor; every other resource paginates by offset. ## Related Skills - `@docx` - When the deliverable is a Word document rather than an Anytype object.