Collection files, section links, webhooks, and public docs
Keep files with your documents, link to durable sections, find and replace in the editor, automate with scoped webhooks, and explore Quire's new public docs.
This update brings more of the work around a document into Quire, makes precise passages easier to find and share, and adds new ways for people and connected agents to follow changes.
Keep files with the work they support
Upload files up to 20 MB alongside documents in a collection or in Unfiled. Images and PDFs open with in-place previews, while other formats remain available to download. You can rename a file, add a description and tags, move it between collections, send it to Trash, and restore it later.
Files also appear in Quire search when their names, descriptions, or tags match. Their access follows the collection around them, so members and guests see only the files available through their existing permissions.
Connected agents can add, inspect, download, describe, organize, delete, and restore the same files. Agents can also provide descriptions, transcriptions, and tags that make a file's contents easier to discover in later searches.
Link to the exact section you mean
Every document heading now has a copyable section link. Opening one jumps directly to that heading, and the link continues to target the same section when its heading text changes. When linking to another Quire document from the editor, you can choose the whole document or a specific section from its outline.
The document editor now includes local find and replace with match counts, next and previous navigation, case-sensitive and whole-word matching, and familiar keyboard shortcuts. Empty editable documents show a quiet “Start writing…” prompt, and the selection toolbar can apply or remove blockquotes without losing inline formatting.
Give connected agents more context
Claude Code users can now install Quire's pasted-image plugin and ask an agent to place a pasted PNG, JPEG, or WebP image directly into a document. The Connect an agent dialog includes setup, usage, and recovery guidance, and image placement preserves captions, alt text, descriptions, and transcriptions through later agent edits.
Connected agents can also inspect a document's semantic history only when a task calls for it. They can review content and lifecycle changes with human or agent attribution, then compare selected versions across the whole document or a specific section.
Trigger workflows with scoped webhooks
Active team members can create signed webhook subscriptions for team or collection activity available to them. Choose the document, collection, and comment events that matter, decide whether agent-only activity should be included, and use a recursive collection scope when a workflow should follow an entire branch.
Each member manages their own subscriptions and delivery history, while team owners can oversee every subscription. Quire also provides controls to enable or disable a webhook, rotate its signing secret, inspect delivery attempts, and redeliver a failed event.
Find answers in the new public docs
Quire now has a public documentation hub with task-oriented guidance for getting started, collaboration, connected agents, webhooks, administration, security, and troubleshooting. Search across the guides, browse by topic, copy links to individual sections, and copy code examples without signing in.