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Boostnote simplenote
Boostnote simplenote









boostnote simplenote
  1. BOOSTNOTE SIMPLENOTE DOWNLOAD
  2. BOOSTNOTE SIMPLENOTE WINDOWS

in to your wikis with RichLinks plugin (see Demos tab)

BOOSTNOTE SIMPLENOTE DOWNLOAD

Managing D&D and similar table top games (just download and open the HTML file - it's the entire wiki itself, all in one).So I continued searching for The Notetaking Software, then I found TiddlyWiki and fell in love with it, because it knows almost everything that I want, besides this it's incredibly hackable: you can turn it to any kind of software, not just notetaking (todo list, book, GTD, project documentation, family tree, photo gallery with categories and tags, etc.)!įor a better understanding of what is the real power of TiddlyWiki, please read Joe Armstrong: My Eureka Moment with the TiddlyWiki then have a look at these examples:

boostnote simplenote

  • Cannot include images and other media types into notes.
  • You can use fuzzy file searchers (like FZF or Everything), but you cannot get the list of tags to pick from that Software.TextEditing", the disadvantages of this is that you has to store the tags in predefined (maybe alphabetical) order With regular searching tools (like Grep) you cannot do fuzzy match, but you can search for regex, like "tags.
  • Hard to search for tags and tag intersections.
  • You can store the tags in the filename and use file searching, but if you want to share your notes with others, he/she will not know what to do
  • You can drop every note into one directory, but in this case looking for them is hard.
  • You have to place your files somewhere in the directory tree, but it's not clear that a note about "NoteTaking" should go in to "TextEditing", "Software", "Practice", because it belongs to all of these "categories"

    boostnote simplenote

    The problem with file based note taking is that

    boostnote simplenote

    Whenever I tried out new stuff, it turned out that it doesn't have some of these features, thus I switched back to old, but good plain text (Asciidoctor) format (because it's the most flexible) + Vim editor (syntax highlighting, search and replace, basic file navigation). My habit is that write a note and add a lot of related tags to it - I don't have to think where to put in the ToC, because I can find anything by tag intersections

  • Require as few as possible external programsįor example compiling Asciidoctor files to HTML require Asciidoctor itself, which is written in Ruby -> needs that too.
  • BOOSTNOTE SIMPLENOTE WINDOWS

    It has to work on Linux / Windows (Android is not reuired, but it's good if it works) - the best would be to use exactly the same GUI on every platform I would like to read my notes from any computer without installing the "editor" itself Be able to read my notes from everywhere.I'm using Git heavily, thus I like to keep my "backups" in a repository - for this job the text format is the bestīesides this I can batch modify the notes via Vim The best would be to store as plain text.If I ever want to change to another tool, I want to move my notes into that easily (at least with minimal modifications) I don't want to depend on companies - when it's closing its doors, my notes are gone Whenever I tried out new ways, these was my most important requirements: I tried out different ways to store my thoughts, for example: plain text (Asciidoctor) files, Jekyll (blog platform), Boostnote (note taking software). I came from the Vim era: it's a popular text editor, mostly used by technical people.











    Boostnote simplenote