What are groups?
A group is a small circle of Moonjar users who can share content with each other. “Family”, “Work team”, “Tokyo trip”. You create the group, share what you want to share into it, and every member sees those items in their own app.
How it works
Section titled “How it works”- Each group has a name and a unique invite code.
- The person who creates the group is its owner. Other members join via the invite code.
- The owner can rename the group, regenerate the invite code, and remove members. Members can’t.
- Once a group exists, its owner can share specific items into it. Sharing is per-item — joining a group doesn’t open everyone’s whole library.
What can be shared into a group
Section titled “What can be shared into a group”- Documents — anything captured.
- Memories — preserves attribution; the chat assistant treats shared memories as the original author’s, not yours.
- Conversations — every member can read the chat and add their own messages.
- Collections — and all their items.
- Trips — with all their bookings, saved places, and itinerary.
- Reminder lists — every member can add, complete, edit items.
When you share an item into a group, every member of that group can see and (depending on the item type) edit it. Removing the share — or removing the member from the group — pulls access immediately.
Default group
Section titled “Default group”You can mark one group as your default group in Settings. New captures (documents, collections, trips) automatically share into the default group. If you’d rather decide per item, leave the default group unset.
Two roles per member:
- Owner — created the group, can rename it, regenerate the invite code, and remove members. There’s exactly one owner per group; ownership doesn’t transfer in the current app.
- Member — every other person. Can share content into the group and see what others have shared in.
Limits
Section titled “Limits”- Groups don’t have nested sub-groups.
- The invite code is short and human-readable. Anyone with the code can join — treat it like a password.
- You can leave a group at any time; rejoin only if you have the current invite code.
- Deleting a group removes everyone’s shared access at once. The underlying items are not deleted.