A stack is a named group of related drafts inside a workspace. Stacks give you organization without a file system: they are flat, with no folders and no nesting, and a draft belongs to at most one stack at a time. Ramble has no directories by design, and stacks appear directly in navigation, not as tags attached to a draft.
Create a stack
On the Stacks page, select New stack and type a name. Press Enter to create it. A name is up to 80 characters. To add a description, edit the stack afterward; a description is up to 200 characters.
There is no limit on the number of stacks in a workspace, or on the number of drafts in a stack.
Add drafts to a stack
From a draft, open the stack control (Add to stack) and pick a stack, or create one. To file several drafts at once, select them in a list and use Move to stack. A draft moves between stacks the same way: choose a different stack, or choose No stack to remove it from its current one.
Because a stack belongs to one workspace, moving a draft to another workspace removes it from its stack. See Sharing & access for what else a cross-workspace move changes.
Reorder, edit, and delete
Each stack appears as a card on the Stacks page. To change the order, use the arrow controls on a card; there is no drag-and-drop.
To rename a stack or change its description, open it and edit those fields. To remove a stack, delete it. Deleting a stack does not delete its drafts: they stay in the workspace, no longer grouped.
Inside a stack
A stack’s page shows the drafts filed in it. From there you search within the stack, sort, and switch between card and list view. New draft on a stack’s page creates a draft already filed in that stack.
Who can manage stacks
Owners and editors create, rename, reorder, delete, and assign stacks. Viewers browse stacks read-only.
Related
- Drafts: create, organize, and recover the drafts you file into stacks
- Workspaces & roles: the shared space a stack belongs to, and who can manage it
- Sharing & access: what moving a draft to another workspace changes