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What is the best alternative to StackEdit?
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Supernotes
All
5
Experiences
Pros
3
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Short-form note-cards
The note-card format is incredibly versatile, and great when you have lots of information.
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Top
Con
Only web apps for now
The developers haven't released native apps yet.
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Top
Pro
Responsive platform
Works on all devices, from mobiles to laptops.
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Top
Pro
Full Markdown (with LaTeX equation) support
Great to be able to use all the features of Markdown, rather than a select few.
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Specs
Platforms:
Web, Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS, Android
API:
Yes
Collaborative:
Yes
Search:
Yes
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28
0
Obsidian md
All
66
Experiences
Pros
55
Cons
10
Specs
Top
Pro
Locally stored, not dependent on cloud
Everything is stored in your device. You can back them up, encrypt and process however you want to. Works completely offline. Read your notes anytime, anywhere.
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Top
Con
Closed Source
See related thread at Obsidian forum.
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Top
Pro
Markdown makes for flatter learning curve
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Top
Con
Needs to be better at block level references, searches, tagging
For example, if you want a tag a block of text, for obsidian, its the whole page that will get tagged.
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Top
Pro
Lightweight and very customizable
Variety of settings, and community themes & plugins, available from built-in marketplace. Every community plugin is open-source which means you can learn from it and develop your own.
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Top
Con
Proprietary software lock-in
Creates dependence on the application with the promise that the content is yours but that cannot be entirely true without the application being free and open source software. You will end up altering the way you create the content to take advantage of Obsidian features and your processes will evolve for its workflows. This replicates the lock-in pain that people experience moving their highly personal information from one proprietary platform to the next when that initial platform stops serving them well, goes out of business, or becomes a bad actor.
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Top
Pro
Backlinking
This allows you to link notes back and forth really easily.
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Top
Con
Does not export to MS Word
Can export only as a PDF file.
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Top
Pro
Fast growing
It's becoming more powerful everyday, it seems like they add many functions within several days.
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Top
Con
Requires .md files
Can't read .txt or other plaintext file formats. Can't read asciidoc files. (Available with a plugin.)
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Top
Pro
Cross-platform: works on Linux, MacOS, Windows, Android and iOS
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Top
Con
No ability to add dates that link to a daily note, when that day/note may not yet exist
You can create a backlink which doesn't yet exist; it just doesn't auto-fill for you. (Available as a plugin)
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Top
Pro
Very easy to use and link notes, preserves the standard form of markdown
Linking notes is a game changing feature. Very easy to use and link notes. Their implementation of markdown doesn't deviate from the standard form of markdown and so the same files can be used by other markdown programs without any consequence. While renaming note link still works.
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Top
Con
Too many plugins
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Top
Pro
Multiple Vaults
A Vault in Obsidian is like a database. Internal links and files are not shared across Vaults. Each Vault is opened with a separate instance of Obsidian. Each Vault can have its unique app settings and plug-ins. Useful if you have distinct/unrelated projects or "data spaces" requiring different workflows and data relations.
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Top
Con
iOS version works only with icloud
Does not work with other cloud folders.
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Top
Pro
In-line tagging
Ability to tag-as-you-write and find each occurrence of a tag in the entire vault makes it very easy to organize and retrieve notes. Supports nested tags.
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Top
Con
Needs to be polished
They still need time to fix some bugs.
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Top
Pro
Infinite panes, split panes, lock panes
In Obsidian, pane = window = note = page Obsidian allows you to open as many notes as you can fit concurrently in your screen. You can split a pane horizontally/vertically. You can lock/link panes so they scroll in sync, useful for and edit & preview modes.
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Top
Con
V1.0 release is terrible
Don't download unless you can't find pre 1.0 version.
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Top
Pro
Functionality extensions with a growing number of plugins
Also open for anyone to develop their own extensions/plugins.
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Top
Pro
Daily Notes with template
Daily Notes plug-in, when clicked, generates a new note with the current date. Great for journaling and reduces friction in your writing habit. You can create a custom template for your Daily Note.
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Top
Pro
Helps visualize personal knowledge in ways nothing else allows
The Graph view is more than an aesthetic gizmo. It allows you to grasp and recognise clusters of information, follow branches and easily filter out what you don't want to see. The "animate" option shows how your notes and links have grown organically. With a bit of tweaking to the visuals and the proper theme, your graph might even start to look like a disturbingly "alive", eerie thing.
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Top
Pro
Random note
A plugin that, when clicked, surfaces a random note from your vault.
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Top
Pro
Support for tags
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Top
Pro
Readable as it hides the [[ ]] around links when in Preview mode
This is a big difference, as having to read through long-form texts laden with [[links]] gives friction.
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Top
Pro
Slides for giving presentations from within Obsidian
Easily turn your notes into simple yet sleek powerpoint-style presentations by enabling the Slides plugin and adding the --- separator.
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Top
Pro
Markdown rather than outline/blocks
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Top
Pro
Keyboard shortcuts, Vim key bindings
Hotkeys can be customized in settings. Can switch on or off Vim key bindings in the editor settings.
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Top
Pro
Great onboarding experience
The onboarding consists of well-written help documentation (saved as a vault) served in small chunks and organized systematically so that you become familiar with all its features as well as get hands-on experience in real time.
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Top
Pro
Community of developers building themes and plug-ins
Due to the tool being very developer-friendly, there are tons of cool developments being made to it by 3rd party devs.
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Top
Pro
Page previews on hover
When you hover on an internal [[link]], you get to preview the note without opening it on a new pane. Page preview plugin must be enabled.
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Top
Pro
Intuitive and easy to use with an excellent help system built-in
The app doesn't frustrate the user - the built-in help is excellent.
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Top
Pro
Embedding attachments, such as PDF
Variety of file formats are directly embedded in the markdown preview, e.g. markdown, image, audio, video and PDF files.
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Top
Pro
Exporting as PDF
Allows exporting your markdown files as PDFs rendered with all of your plugins.
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Top
Pro
Calendar
Daily and Weekly notes with Calendar Plugin.
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Top
Pro
Graph view
A pretty, alternative way to represent links between your notes.
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Top
Pro
Multiple cursors
A feature unseen in other tools. From the help doc, "This can be useful when modifying a lot of lines in the same way, for example putting - at the beginning of multiple lines to turn them into a list, or appending [[ to a series of links you’ve copied from elsewhere."
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Top
Pro
Can copy search results and paste as lists and/or links in a new or existing note
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Top
Pro
Advanced search
Supports extended searching by default. Community plugin called "Vantage" allows to make more advanced queries.
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Top
Pro
Git integration
Version Control for your vault with Obsidian Git plugin.
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Top
Pro
Aliases
Allows to refer to a note with multiple names.
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Top
Pro
Big and helpful community
There's a Discord server and a forum. Join the community!
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Top
Pro
Not locked to a provider
No lock-in to a certain company - just markdown files on disk.
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Top
Pro
Mindmaps
Available as a plugin.
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Top
Pro
Math
Uses MathJax.
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Top
Pro
Templates
Allows to create templates with built-in plugin. There's also powerful community plugin called "Templater".
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Top
Pro
Diagrams
Uses Mermaid.
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Top
Pro
Linking to blocks
You can link to a block - e.g.: paragraph, blockquote, heading.
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Top
Pro
Metadata
Add a custom metadata to a note with YAML front matter.
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Top
Pro
Sketching
With Excalidraw.
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Top
Pro
Academic citations
Supports Citations and provides inserting from Zotero.
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Top
Pro
SQL-like queries
Advanced queries for the data-obsessed with Dataview Plugin.
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Top
Pro
Workspaces
Saving and loading workspaces.
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Top
Pro
Built-in Audio Recorder
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Top
Pro
Folders and file level storage which is open to manage, does not lock navigation
With other options like notion, we can not see how the data is actually stored.
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Top
Pro
HTML Support
Use HTML in a note.
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Top
Pro
Incredible tool for PKM (Personal Knowledge Management) which allows anyone who has a computer and an internet connection to think better and create new insights
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Top
Pro
Helps with planning and organization.
Variety of planning and organization plugins, such as Kanban boards or Day Planner.
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Top
Pro
Supports importing from other tools
Supports importing from tools such as Notion, Evernote, OneNote, Apple Notes, Bear, Zkn3, TiddlyWiki 5, and Roam Research. Refer to Obsidian Help for more info.
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Top
Pro
Supports several languages
Translations are made by the community at GitHub repository.
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Top
Pro
Discord rich presence
Update your Discord status to show your friends what are you working on with Discord Rich Presence plugin.
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Top
Pro
Syntax highlighting for code blocks
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Top
Pro
Snapshots, file recovery, trash folder
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Top
Pro
Copy and paste images easily
When taking notes, you can just grab a print screen from your clipboard and paste into the notes without having to do any file management
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac, iOS, Android
API:
Beta
Collaborative:
Upcoming
Search:
Advanced
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Experiences
Free / paid
899
70
Boostnote
All
15
Experiences
Pros
10
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Cross platform support
Supports Windows, macOS and Linux.
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Top
Con
Some of the features are not consistent
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Top
Pro
Markdown support
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Top
Con
Must use third-party service for sync-ing (Dropbox, etc.)
Boostnote does not have sync-ing capabilities and relies on third-party services to fulfil notes storage. There are additional steps involved to set this up.
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Top
Pro
Free
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Top
Con
Can't work in "real" offline mode
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Top
Pro
Open source
See here.
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Top
Con
Very poor syncing
Data loss may occur on syncing.
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Top
Pro
Great for developers
Boostnote is great for developers looking to take programming notes with code snippets and such.
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Top
Pro
Supports code snippets and syntax highlighting
Boostnote has the ability to store code snippets and comes with syntax highlighting out of the box, supporting many languages.
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Top
Pro
Works offline
Boostnote doesn't require an internet connection to work. You can write notes offline and sync later.
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Top
Pro
Global search, tag feature
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Top
Pro
Comes with many themes
Boostnote comes with many themes out of the box, most of which are popular themes and color schemes for code editors: e.g. 3024, base16, solarized, tomorrow.
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Top
Pro
vim/emacs key bindings available
Boostnote supports vim/emacs key bindings. If you're a developer familiar with either of them, navigation should be easy to pick up.
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows/MacOS/Linux/Android/IOS
License:
GPL v3
API:
No
Dark Theme:
Yes
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Experiences
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here
605
54
typora
All
20
Experiences
Pros
14
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Pro
Live preview
Typora immediately renders what's typed on the screen in Markdown format. This helps users to have a better understanding of how their document is being formatted.
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Top
Con
No mobile (Android/iOS) apps
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Top
Pro
Hybrid interface
The editor and preview dual-pane setup typical of desktop Markdown editors are gone; instead, a singular interface makes for a WYSIWYG experience. This streamlines the workflow and encourages direct manipulation.
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Top
Con
In beta
Typora is still in beta and may be prone to changes or bugs.
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Top
Pro
Support for LaTeX expressions
It supports LaTeX expressions, with an easy-to-use MaxJax panel.
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Top
Con
Unusable image management
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Top
Pro
Syntax highlight for fenced codes
It supports GFM's code fences, with syntax highlight support for C/C++, java, etc.
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Top
Con
The immediate rendering of Markdown is hard on the eyes
Having Markdown immediately render causes text to jump into formatted text, which is distracting and hard on the eyes.
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Top
Pro
Custom theme support
Typora has clean yet beautiful built-in themes and allows for users to create new themes using CSS.
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Top
Con
No portable version (Windows)
You need admin rights on a managed Windows computer to install it. There currently is no portable version available.
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Top
Pro
Support for tables
It supports tables for Markdown Extra. And also provides a GUI to make it easy to insert and edit them.
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Top
Pro
Inline images
It won't display image like ![alt](http://image-url), But shows the image content inside the editor.
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Top
Pro
Free during beta
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Top
Pro
Shows table of contents for the document
It supports an outline for the document, by showing a table of contents on the left side of the screen.
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Top
Pro
Cross-platform
Currently works on Windows, Mac and Linux.
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Top
Pro
Natural typing experience
Editing in Markdown, either in WYSIWYG mode or in markdown code mode, feels natural. It never gets in the way.
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Top
Pro
Make charts and diagrams with Mermaid, FlowChart and Sequence
Use fenced code-blocks to render diagrams using syntax from Mermaid and FlowChart.js.
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Top
Pro
Sidebar with a list of files
You can open any folder in sidebar and see a list of other markdown files.
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Top
Pro
Syncs with iCloud
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Specs
Platforms:
Mac OSX; Windows; Linux
License:
Proprietary
Price:
$14.99
Export:
HTML; HTML (pure); PDF; Word; OpenOffice; RTF; Epub; LaTeX; Media Wiki; ReStructuredText; Textile; OPML
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Experiences
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here
484
59
Notion
All
21
Experiences
Pros
15
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Pro
Full-featured on desktop, mobile and web
Even the right-click menus on the web are the same as the app.
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Top
Con
Not very fast using native apps
Can take time if you're switching between lots of pages often as it needs to load the data each time
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Top
Pro
Unlike anything else
One of the most complete applications one can use to build a personal dashboard (or professional) and migrate all other services to it. No more calendar, task, notes, financials, lists, writing and wiki apps, just Notion.
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Top
Con
Not always very intuitive
Column filters are not that intuitive to apply.
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Top
Pro
Pages within pages within pages, to infinity
You can have a ridiculous amount of information within a single note. Look at how it works, you'll be surprised!
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Top
Con
No true backup
True backup can only exist if it's automated and easily recoverable. Else, it's just an outdated copy or useless scrambled data.
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Top
Pro
Flexible contents storage and organization
You can upload files and embed online stuff in any hierarchical structure using pages, toggle lists, etc.
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Top
Con
Designed with teams in mind, and less formatting than Evernote
Evernote may be more individual-oriented and has more formatting and such options available, but whether that affects you is down to personal preference. Try both and see which you prefer.
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Top
Pro
Highly visual, with icons next to every new page and so on
This feature makes it very easy to find certain notes and such. And great for visual people as well. You could also add images as icons instead, if you like.
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Top
Con
Not yet a new protocol, as it could be! (or could it?)
Think of scuttlebutt or email. the best Evernote alternative would be a "web 3.0" of sorts. Something that would be just a simple file added to a computer and automatically replicated to other computers along with a website and any company could easily pick up the concept and make their own hosting, including some awesome google drive/host of sorts.
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Top
Pro
Blocks offer incredible flexibility
The basic unit of organization in Notion is the block, which can be a chunk of text, an image, a bullet point, or even a link to another page. Each page consists of these blocks, which can be easily reorganized, moved to other pages, converted into other content types, or generally manipulated in many useful ways. Because of blocks, restructuring information in Notion is way easier than in any other wiki or notebook app.
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Top
Pro
Does a great job with both notes and to-dos
To-dos in Notion aren't just dot point lists. You can drag and drop them into columns just like Trello (Kanban style), you can have sub-tasks, and you can easily mark things off as completed so they are no longer in your way. Notes are also powerful, with proper formatting and ways to manage and search for them, which makes it a great Evernote alternative.
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Top
Pro
Cross platform
Works with Android, iOS, Windows, & Mac OSX.
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Top
Pro
Awesome for wikis
You can easily start writing a bunch of web pages, share it with co-workers and choose whether to publicize or keep your contents private. It's also easy to hyperlink pages.
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Top
Pro
Amazing view flexibility
You can create different views for a page's content and easily toggle between kanban, table, etc. (As long as the content is able to allow different views.)
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Top
Pro
Quick and effective search
Just type in a word and you'll have results in no time at all.
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Top
Pro
Attach files in tables
You can attach files in table cells, which is a feature missing in most spreadsheet-like applications.
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Top
Pro
Great spreadsheet functionality
You can use calculation/formula, links, attachment, inter-referencing of data from other pages or tables, embed documents and images in the table cells.
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Top
Pro
Renders Markdown Syntax
Add code blocks, Headers, bullet point, numbered lists, or To-Do boxes by typing using Markdown Syntax (instead of klunkily moving the mouse to formatting boxes)
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Top
Pro
Less headaches when editing pages
Lets you restore your page to a past edit. Also works with sub-pages and databases. Though it is worth mentioning that it's a paid feature.
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, macOS, iOS, Android, Web
Collaborative:
Yes
Offline access:
No
Markdown support:
Export
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Experiences
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450
88
iA Writer
All
10
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Con
No Linux support
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Top
Pro
Noise Free Writing Experience removes even the program bar
The Noise Free Writing Experience is one of the first approaches to create a first class distraction-free environment. The feature hides the Mac program bar when you start writing.
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Top
Pro
A mode that brings focus to the sentence you're working on
Enabling Focus Mode will dim the whole text except the sentence you are currently writing on.
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Top
Pro
Can tell how long it would take to read through what you've written
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Top
Pro
Markdown support
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Top
Pro
Syncs using iCloud and Dropbox
iA Writer can sync documents using iCloud or Dropbox from within the editor for use across multiple devices.
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Top
Pro
Create whole document by including separate images/markdown docs
This is new and very awesome feature in iA Writer 4.0.
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Top
Pro
Can export a Word document
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Top
Pro
Available for all Apple devices
iA Writer is available for Mac, iPhone and iPad.
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Specs
Platforms:
MacOS, iOS, Android, Windows
License:
Proprietary
Price:
$59,99
Export:
HTML, PDF
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Experiences
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89
26
Vim
All
46
Experiences
Pros
30
Cons
15
Specs
Top
Pro
Lightweight and fast
When compared to modern graphical editors like Atom and Brackets (which have underlying HTML5 engines, browsers, Node, etc.), Vim uses a sliver of the system's memory and it loads instantly, all the while delivering the same features. Vim is also faster than Emacs.
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Top
Con
High effort to customize
A lot of time and effort is put in to make it specific to your needs.
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Top
Pro
Free and open-source software
Vim is open-source, GPL-compatible charityware.
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Top
Con
Difficult learning curve
You'll spend a lot of time learning all the commands and modes supported in Vim. You'll then spend more time tuning settings to your needs. Although once it's tuned to your needs, you can take your .vimrc to any machine you need and have the same experience across all your computers.
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Top
Pro
Works in terminal over SSH
Unlike other editors such as Sublime Text, Vim is a command line editor and hence can be used in remote development environments like Chromebooks via SSH.
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Top
Con
Difficult to copy, paste, and delete
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Pro
Extremely portable
Vi/vim exists on almost all Unix-like platforms. It's the de-facto Unix editor and is easily installed on Windows. All you need to make it work is a text-based connection, so it works well for remote machines with slow connections, or when you're too lazy to set up a VNC/Remote Desktop connection.
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Top
Con
Poor support for external tooling
Many plugins depend on optional Python and Lua features, which may or may not be included in whatever binaries are available for your system. And without platform-specific hacks, it is difficult for plugins to operate in the background or use external tooling.
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Top
Pro
Keyboard-based, mouse-free interface, and trackpad support
There's no need to reach for the mouse or the Ctrl/Alt buttons again. Everything is a mere key press or two away with almost 200 functions specifically for text editing. Vim does support the mouse, but it's designed so you don't have to use it for greater efficiency. Versions of Vim, like gVim or MacVim, still allow you to use the mouse and familiar platform shortcuts. That can help ease the learning curve and you'll probably find you won't want to (or need to) use the mouse after a while.
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Top
Con
Poor feature discoverability
Though basic features like syntax checking, autocompletion, and file management are all available out of the box or with minimal configuration, this is not obvious to new users, who might get intimidated or assume they need to install complex plugins just so they can have this functionality. Other features new users might expect to find embedded in Vim, such as debugging, instead follow a UNIX-style model where they are called as external programs, the output of which might then be parsed by Vim so it can display results. Users not familiar with this paradigm will likely fault Vim for lacking those features as well.
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Pro
Great productivity
Vim's keyset is mainly restricted to the alphanumeric keys and the escape key. This is an enduring relic of its teletype heritage, but has the effect of making my ost of Vim's functionality accessible without frequent awkward finger reaches.
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Top
Con
No smooth scrolling
Even with the GUI version, the lines jiggle line-by-line. If you are used to smooth scrolling, this is very annoying, especially when working with larger files.
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Top
Pro
Macros increase productivity
Many text editors have programmable macros, but since Vim is keyboard-based, your programmed macros are usually far more predictable and easier to understand.
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Top
Con
Doesn't play nice with the system cut/paste mechanisms
This can be worked around somewhat if you disable mouse for insert mode. You can then right-click your terminal and use paste like you would anywhere else in a terminal. But it still doesn't feel right when the rest of your system uses Ctrl-C/Ctrl-V, and you have a system clipboard manager, and so forth.
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Pro
Excellent performance
As it loads the whole file into RAM, replacing all string occurrences in 100 MB+ files is quick and easy. Every other editor has sort of died during that. It is extremely fast even for cold start. Vim is light-weight and very compact. In terminal, it only uses a small amount of memory and anytime you invoke Vim, it's extremely fast. It's immediate, so much so you can't even notice any time lag.
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Top
Con
Outdated UI
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Pro
Tons of plugins/add-ons
This makes Vim the definitive resource for every environment (Ruby/Rails, Python, C, etc.), or simply just provides more information in your view.
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Con
Requires Brain Mode Switching
When editing in vim, you have you use the vim keys; when editing in every other window on your PC, or in Word or Excel or other application, you need to use the standard system key combinations. Learning the vim combinations can actually make you SLOWER at everything else.
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Pro
Everything is mnemonic
No need to memorize different key combinations for things like deleting the text inside of a block or deleting the text inside of a pair of quotes. It's just a series of actions, or nouns and verbs, or however you prefer to think about it. If you want to delete, you select "d"; if you want it to happen inside something, you select "i"; and if you want the surrounding double-quotes, just select ". But if you were changing the text, or copying it, or anything else, you'd still use the same "i" and ". This makes it very easy to remember a large number of different extremely useful commands, without the effort it takes to remember all of the Emacs "magic incantations", for example.
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Top
Con
Slow when opening files with very long lines
A lot of very long lines can make Vim take up to a minute to open files, where a few other editors take only seconds to load the same file.
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Pro
Vimtutor
Vimtutor is an excellent interactive tutorial for people with no prior experience of Vim. It takes about 30 minutes to complete.
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Top
Con
Consume brain energy for editing that should be used for logic
Text editing in vim is awesome, but it requires thinking about combination of commands. In other editors, you don't have to think about how to delete this part of code. You just think about how to implement a feature, what is a good design for this code. Even after you get used to using vim, it still requires your brain for editing.
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Pro
Amazing extensibility
Vimscript provides a rich scripting functionality to build upon the core of Vim. When combined with things like Tim Pope's Pathogen plugin management system, it becomes easy to add support for syntax, debugging, build systems, git, and more.
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Top
Con
Foreign keyboards have a hard time on Vim out of the box
A lot of frequently-used keybinds are way harder to access on foreign keyboards because they use different layouts. For example, Germans use the QWERTZ layout, while French use the AZERTY.
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Top
Pro
Usable from a Terminal or with a GUI (GVim, MacVim)
If you happen to be logged into SSH, you can use Vim in a terminal. It can also run with a GUI too.
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Top
Con
Unintuitive mode switching
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Pro
Has been supported for a long time
And will be supported for many years to come.
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Top
Con
Extensibility isn't that great
While it has gotten better and some projects are slowly starting to build proper extension support, it still can't and by design never will achieve the extensibility of another editor like emacs.
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Pro
Once learned, it's very hard to forget
Vim's somewhat steep learning curve is more than made up for once you've mastered a few basic concepts and learned the tricks that allow you to program faster with fewer cut/paste mistakes.
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Con
Works poorly out of the box with right-to-left
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Pro
Can never outgrow it
The fact that very few, if any, people claim to be a "Vim Master" is a testament to the breadth and depth of Vim. There is always something new to learn - a new, perhaps more efficient, way to use it. This prevents Vim from ever feeling stale. It's always fresh.
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Pro
Flexible feature-set
Vim allows users to include many features found in IDEs and competing editors, but does not force them all on the user. This not only helps keep it lighter in weight than a lot of other options, but it also helps ensure that some unused features will not get in the way.
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Top
Pro
Has multiple distinct editing modes
Interaction with Vim is centered around several "modes", where purpose and keybindings differ in each. Insert mode is for entering text. This mode most resembles traditional text entry in most editors. Normal mode (the default) is entered by hitting ESC and converts all keybindings to center around movement within the file, search, pane selection, etc. Command mode is entered by hitting ":" in Normal mode and allows you to execute Vim commands and scripts similar in fashion to a shell. Visual mode is for selecting lines, blocks, and characters of code. Those are the major modes, and several more exist depending on what one defines as a "mode" in Vim.
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Top
Pro
By default in Linux
All Linux distributions out there will have Vim built into them, which is highly convenient!
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Top
Pro
Vim encourages discipline
If you use Vim long enough, it will rewire your brain to be more efficient.
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Top
Pro
Useful undo features
Vim does not only offer unlimited undo levels, later releases support an undo tree. It eventually gives the editor VCS-like features. You can undo the current file to any point in the past, even if a change was already undone again. Another neat feature is persistent undo, which enables to undo changes after the file was closed and reopened again.
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Top
Pro
Donations and support to Vim.org helps children in Uganda through ICCF Holland
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Top
Pro
Built-in package management
Starting with Vim 8, a package manager has been built into Vim. The package manager helps keep track of installed plugins, their versions and also only loads the needed plugins on startup depending on the file type.
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Top
Pro
If you can use Vim you can also use vi
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Top
Pro
Works on Android
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Top
Pro
Productivity enhancing modal paradigm
As with all vi-like editors, Vim provides a modal paradigm for text editing and processing that provides a rich syntax and semantic model for composing succinct, powerful commands. While this requires some initial investment in learning how it works in order to take full advantage of its capabilities, it rewards the user well in the long run. This modal interface paradigm also lends itself surprisingly well to many other types of applications that can be controlled by vi-like keybindings, such as browsers, image viewers, media players, network clients (for email and other communication media), and window managers. Even shells (including zsh, tcsh, mksh, and bash, among others) come with vi-like keybinding features that can greatly enhance user comfort and efficiency when the user is familiar with the vi modal editing paradigm.
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Top
Pro
Asynchronous I/O support
Since Vim 8, Vim can exchange characters with background processes asynchronously. This avoids the problem of the text editor getting stuck when a plugin that had to communicate with a server was running. Now plugins can send and receive data from external scripts without forcing Vim to freeze.
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Top
Pro
Can set up keymapping
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Top
Pro
Multiple clipboards
It is called "registers".
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Top
Pro
Status Booster
Using vim not just increase your productivity, but helps you flex.
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Specs
Platforms:
Linux, macOS, Windows, Cygwin
License:
Vim License
Price:
0
Extension language:
Vim
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free
2402
445
hackmd.io
All
26
Experiences
Pros
20
Cons
6
Top
Pro
Collaborative
Allows multiple people to edit the same note in realtime.
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Top
Con
Custom grammar and spell checker
It does not work well in French (and probably other languages).
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Top
Pro
Automatic "table of content"
Automatically generates a "table of content" of your headlines.
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Top
Con
Not as beautiful as StackEdit
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Top
Pro
Supports revisions
Allows you to go back in time to a previous version of your document.
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Top
Con
Cannot organize notes
Doesn't have the ability to organize notes or create notebooks.
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Top
Pro
Edit and view-only permission settings
Note: Enterprise Edition has even more refined permissions, but the permissions in the non-enterprise edition are pretty powerful.
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Top
Con
Slow servers / problem with online / offline switching
Servers can be slow / down for a few seconds preventing from working on the documents currently being edited.
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Top
Pro
Shortcuts from Sublime Text, Emacs, and Vim
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Top
Con
No PDF export support
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Top
Pro
Tag support
This is truly helpful for organizing your documents.
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Top
Con
Tries to be smart
It guesses what you want to do and tries to help, often in a wrong and annoying way, for example it when working with list items. Ironically Markdown was built to solve those problems (you format yourself with simple codes and it just works).
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Top
Pro
Can create slide-shows
Supports creating slide-shows in markdown.
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Top
Pro
Online
It's multi-platform (works well on smartphones) and there is no need to install anything.
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Top
Pro
Math support
Use LaTeX seamlessly within the editor.
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Top
Pro
Dark and white theme
Perfect for working at night.
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Top
Pro
Lightweight
See More
Top
Pro
Book mode view
This is really helpful for longer documents. Or even "books." This is also super helpful for journaling activities and the like.
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Top
Pro
Available as a web service
HackMD service can be downloaded and installed in custom servers.
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Top
Pro
Cross platform
Is available as desktop app.
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Top
Pro
Dropbox import and export
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Top
Pro
Extended markdown syntax
Adds supports for embeddings from Youtube, Vimeo, Speakerdeck, GitHub gist etc; and even creating UML diagrams, Graphviz graphs, Timing charts, and even Music notes! and alerts and comments boxes and emojis.
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Top
Pro
Open source
HackMD Core's source is available on GitHub.
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Top
Pro
Free
You can subscribe to it for more features.
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Top
Pro
Github Gist import and export
People who subscribe can push and pull unlimited.
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Top
Pro
Google Drive import and export
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Experiences
0
62
4
Gingko
All
7
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Con
Limited free version
The free version is limited to 100 cards and 10 documents. Depending on how you use it, this might not be enough.
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Top
Pro
You can customize colors
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Top
Pro
Allows focusing on one piece of information at a time
Since Gingko documents are "trees", they are always organized on the go. And since everything is written in cards, it is possible to focus on one chunk of content at a time.
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Top
Pro
Easy to overview
Despite the complexity of the tree structure, it's always clear where you are, and how to quickly add your thoughts.
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Top
Pro
Markdown support
All formatting is done via Markdown.
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Top
Pro
Non-linear
Non-linear notetaking allows you more flexibility, freedom and creativity.
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Specs
Platforms:
Web
Preview:
Live Preview
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Experiences
Get it
here
19
3
Haroopad
All
16
Experiences
Pros
10
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Pro
Very customizable
Haroopad has multiple available themes to choose from and new ones can be easily built with CSS.
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Top
Con
English translation is iffy
The software was initially developed in Korean for Korean users and later translated and ported to English. The translation to English has not been perfect and there may be some weird expressions and grammatical errors along the way.
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Top
Pro
Multiplatform support
Runs on Mac, Windows and Linux with 32-bit and 64-bit binary packages available.
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Top
Con
Documentation is in Korean
The official documentation is in Korean, so it may be a bit hard for non-Korean speakers to find their way around Haroopad.
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Top
Pro
Completely free
Haroopad is a free and open source Markdown Editor.
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Top
Con
Windows installer does not support easy admin installation
It can't request the necessary privileges to install to C:\Program Files.
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Top
Pro
Various publishing and export options
Haroopad can publish to Wordpress, Evernote, Tumblr and MediaWiki and export to EPub, ReStructured Text, RTF and PDF.
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Top
Con
Undo sometimes loses control about the selection
Select some text, select a formatting in the Markdown Syntax Helper view, undo.
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Top
Pro
Mathematical expressions support
Haroopad supports mathematical expressions through LaTeX and MathJax.
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Top
Con
Code pane is dark in default theme
Can be hard to read and a bit hard to find where to change it.
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Top
Pro
Supports MathJax
Mathematical equations can be exported to the browser by using MathJax, a JavaScript display engine with a lot of great features such as typography support and modular output.
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Top
Pro
Allows embedding content from a wide variety of sources
Content from YouTube, Twitter, Vimeo, Slideshare, Flickr, Instagram, Soundcloud, Wikipedia and Pastebin can be embedded in the document.
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Top
Pro
The Markdown flavor can be extended
Haroopad supports GitHub Markdown flavor out of the box. But the functionality can be extended to support additional Markdown features.
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Top
Pro
Vi key bindings
For people used ti vi/vim, Haroopad can be set up to be used with vi keybindings.
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Top
Pro
Dual License
GPL3 license is applied to the current version and will be applied in the future to meet the internal dual licensing scheme. Commercial use follows Apache license v2 (APLv2) for keeping the GPL license and non-commercial use under consideration.
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Specs
Platforms:
MacOS, Windows, Linux
License:
GPLv3
Languages:
Javascript
Export:
HTML; EPub; ReStructured Text; PDF; RTF
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Experiences
Free
93
15
Zettlr
All
7
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Focuses on writers
While many Markdown editors don't offer specific support for a certain type of workflow, or offer features for scientific workflows only, Zettlr offers features that help the writing process of journalists or researchers in the arts and humanities. It's a lot more text-focused than most editors.
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Top
Con
Obtrusive, like someone WITH CAPS LOCK ON
Too loud, too much going on, and definitely an in-your-face sort of feeling.
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Top
Pro
Citation support
While it supports a diverse range of syntax (chart, easy image insert, etc.) found in other editors, the great citation support made it possible to write real articles. Citation from Zotero and Mendeley can be inserted easily which is a huge plus.
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Top
Con
Large, slow, can't open just a single .md file
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Top
Pro
Almost perfect
This is the best option, still not perfect, there are some bugs like creating / editing tables and resizing images, but the PROS destroy the CONS, easy quotes, WYSIWYM , attachments tab (supports attaching and opening links to any file), table of contents, TAGs, easy hyperlink between files (same as citations), export to many formats (like Word, HTML5, PDF)...
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Top
Pro
Renders math in-place through KaTex
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac
License:
GPL v3
Technology:
Electron, TypeScript
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Experiences
0
102
17
Bear
All
13
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Beautiful interface
Well-designed app.
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Top
Con
Only subscription-based
Can not buy it straight up.
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Top
Pro
Easy to use
See More
Top
Con
No Tabs - can only view 1 note at a time
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Top
Pro
Instant markdown preview in the editor while preserving original MD code
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Top
Con
No inline editing and markup of pictures
The only option is to open in an editor (thereby creating a copy) and saving it again.
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Top
Pro
Easy tagging
For example: #tag/sub tag/foo/bar #tag2/foo/bar
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Top
Con
Sometimes there are sync problems between iOS and macOS
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Top
Pro
Flawless sync
It's everything Dropbox Paper promised to be, but without the embarrassment. The notes are always in sync between devices.
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Top
Pro
Lots of export formats
PDF, RTF, DOCX, HTML, TXT and MD.
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Top
Pro
Hashtag support
Adding a hashtag with a keyword tags the note to make it easy to search.
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Top
Pro
Simple to back up/export entire note database
Notes are exported as plain text, not a proprietary format, along with all embedded objects.
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Specs
Platforms:
iOS, OSX
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Experiences
$0-14.99/YEAR
116
29
Texts
All
9
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Supports multiple Markdown dialects
Unfortunately, this is a global setting for save (it can open any dialect)
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Top
Con
Overwrites standard Markdown
Editing a preexisting Markdown document overwrites standard markup in it (for example, interpreting headings marked with leading "#"s and rewriting them with a trailing underscore line), adds extra blank lines between all paragraphs, and adds extra spaces at the head of unordered-list items.
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Top
Pro
Immediate Markdown rendering and preview
Texts immediately renders the formatted Markdown as you are typing it inside the text box. It's quite similar to a WYSIWYG editor.
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Top
Con
Spell checking is not activated by default
There's a built-in spell checker which is not activated by default and is quite hidden.
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Top
Pro
Imports and exports many formats
HTML, Word, TeX, PDF, ePUB, OPML.
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Top
Con
Limited choice of built-in themes
You can download the CSS for these themes and create your own, but would be nice to have more flavors (e.g. GitHub)
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Top
Pro
Works on Mac OS X and Windows
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Top
Con
No word count in older versions
Word count is present in Texts 0.21, at least.
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Specs
Platforms:
MacOS, Windows
License:
Proprietary
Export:
HTML, Word, TeX, PDF, ePUB, OPML
Preview:
WYSIWYG
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Experiences
Free
18
6
Joplin
All
24
Experiences
Pros
14
Cons
9
Specs
Top
Pro
Offline access
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Top
Con
Sync issues with Android
If update on Linux then sync on Android, sometimes the Android sync will duplicate or remove some journal notes. Seems to be a bug in the Android app. The Linux app alone without sync with Android seems to work well using Dropbox. But don't expect changes you make on Android to sync properly back to Linux.
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Top
Pro
Open source
Peace of mind that there is no malicious piece of software in the app.
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Top
Con
Sync issue under Linux
The Linux client has a bug that requires the user to click the mouse frequently in order for sync to proceed. This bug has been open for a while.
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Top
Pro
Encryption
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Top
Con
Gargantuan memory footprint
1GB+ of memory for taking notes.
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Top
Pro
Cross-platform
Supports Windows, Mac, Linux, Android and iOS.
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Top
Con
Old school interface
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Top
Pro
Supports file attachments
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Top
Con
Bloated
This project is suffering from feature creep and uses a lot of memory for a note-taking app.
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Top
Pro
Supports markdown
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Top
Con
App Image launches very slowly
On Linux, you can only install via App Image, which take 5+ seconds to launch. I can launch LibreOffice in under two seconds.
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Top
Pro
Supports tags for notes
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Top
Con
Sync issues on Windows
No way to change account settings and sync easily corrupted.
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Top
Pro
Web Clipper
Browser extension saves full pages, clean content, or screen selections to new notes.
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Top
Con
Weak tag searching
Joplin can currently only search for a single tag at a time. None of the boolean operators (AND, OR, NOT) are available for use in searches. This greatly diminishes the usefulness of tags in Joplin.
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Top
Pro
Optional CLI interface
Provides a CLI interface for terminal lovers.
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Top
Con
Can't create tags from the mobile app
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Top
Pro
Supports multiple languages
English, French, and Spanish, Italian, German, Czech and many others.
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Top
Pro
Active user forum with support from app creators
Support, troubleshooting, and new feature requests are easy to make at the user forum and you can contact the app creator directly.
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Top
Pro
Dropbox support
Can sync using Dropbox.
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Top
Pro
Nextcloud support
See More
Top
Pro
Timed alarm reminder for to-do lists
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Mac, Linux, Android, iOS
License:
MIT
Export:
Yes
Sync:
File System, OneDrive, Next Cloud, WebDav, DropBox, JoplinCloud, s3 (Beta)
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Experiences
FOSS
679
130
Caret
All
11
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
2
Specs
Top
Pro
Single-pane hybrid interface
The single pane formats your MD as you write it but retains the markup so you can see what's going on.
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Top
Con
Not free
No longer free, try and buy
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Top
Pro
Has a heading navigator
Hit ⌘ G to see document titles in a hierarchical view, type and use the arrows to navigate.
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Top
Con
The shortcuts don't toggle formatting
Pressing cmd+B, for example, will begin a bold segment of text, but pressing it again doesn't end that bold segment, it retroactively turns the boldness off. This interrupts writing flow tremendously.
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Top
Pro
Has a file manager
Hit ⌘ T to browse current folder, navigate the file system and manage your files and folders, type to search, right click to create / move / rename / delete items.
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Top
Pro
Supports multiple cursors / selections
Make ten changes at the same time, not one change ten times - lets you edit multiple lines at once, perform quick and selective find and replace, etc.
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Top
Pro
Supports context commands
Hit "Enter" to fix spelling, convert list to ordered/unordered/task, convert reference link to inline, jump to reference link definition, jump to footnote definition, visit links, etc.
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Top
Pro
Supports auto-completions
Auto-completion for paths of links and images, keywords in fenced code blocks, emoji, etc.
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Top
Pro
Offers inline preview for LaTeX math expressions
Renders LaTeX math expressions as soon as you have finished writing them.
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Top
Pro
Supports "select more" / "select less" commands
Hit ⌥ ↑ to extend the current selection to the next biggest element and ⌥ ↓ to shrink the selection.
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Specs
Platforms:
MacOS, Windows, Linux
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Experiences
Get it
here
22
8
Quiver
All
12
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
4
Specs
Top
Pro
Has more features than just a simple Markdown editor
Quiver is a notebook and note-taking app akin to Evernote which happens to also be able to edit Markdown files. As such, it has a lot of useful features such as: image support, file attachments, web content support and more.
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Top
Con
You can't edit specific files, they must be in your notebook
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Top
Pro
Supports code highlighting
Has syntax highlighting for more than 120 programming languages.
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Top
Con
No iOS apps for editing, only a viewer available
I'd LOVE to edit and create quiver notes on my iPad!
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Top
Pro
Live preview
Quiver has live preview for both Markdown and LaTeX. This helps users to better understand the way they are formatting their files.
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Top
Con
The line in focus shows a border around it which is distracting
The line in focus in the editor shows a rounded rectangular border around it, which is unappealing and distracting.
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Top
Pro
Notes can be linked to each-other
Quiver notes have unique links that can be copied and pasted into other notes to gain quick access between them.
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Top
Con
Much more than a simple Markdown editor
Since it's more like a note-taking app (and a note-taking app built for developers) than a Markdown editor, it may be a little excessive to use it only for its Markdown editing features.
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Top
Pro
Cloud syncing
Dropbox, iCloud Drive, Google Drive, or any other file-based cloud services.
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Top
Pro
Supports vi keybindings
For people used to vi keybindings, Quiver can be set up to work with them.
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Top
Pro
Combination of different types of writing in one note
The most outstanding thing for me. Use HTML line breaks while writing MD text. Also, unlike most hybrid editors like Bear, it supports instant image sizing and respective preview.
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Specs
Platforms:
macOS
License:
Proprietary
Export:
Text, Markdown, LaTeX
Preview:
Live Preview
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Experiences
Get it
here
95
31
Visual Studio Code
All
39
Experiences
Pros
24
Cons
14
Specs
Top
Pro
Extendable through plug-ins
Visual Studio Code comes fairly complete out of the box, but there are many plug-ins available to extend its functionality.
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Top
Con
Embedded Git isn't powerful enough
You can do nothing but to track changes, stage them and commit. No history, visualization, rebasing or cherry-picking – these things are left to git console or external git client.
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Top
Pro
TypeScript integration
There is very solid TypeScript integration in Visual Studio Code. Both are developed by Microsoft and VSC itself is written in TypeScript.
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Top
Con
The autocomplete and code check is not as powerful as the one on WebStorm
Sometimes it doesn't tell you if you made a typo in a method name or if a method is not used and several other important features.
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Top
Pro
Integrated debugging
VSC includes debugging tools for Node.js, TypeScript, and JavaScript.
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Top
Con
File search is extremely slow
It's absolutely not possible to use this tool with big projects given how long it takes to search for files.
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Top
Pro
Ready to use out of the box
You don't need to configure and add plugins before being productive. However, you can add plugins if needed but for the basics you're well covered.
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Top
Con
Project search limits results
Because file search is so slow your results are limited in order to simulate a faster search.
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Top
Pro
Integrated terminal
There's no need to press alt+tab to go to a terminal: it is directly integrated into the editor. Shift+~ is a handy hotkey to toggle the integrated terminal.
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Top
Con
Very bad auto import
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Top
Pro
Great performance
For a 'wrapped' web-based application, Visual Studio Code performs very well.
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Top
Con
Generalized
VS Code is a general code/scripting IDE built to be lightweight and for people familiar with their language of choice, not directly comparable to Visual Studio in power or scope.
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Top
Pro
Libre/open source
Released under the MIT License.
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Top
Con
Memory hog
Allegedly, VS Code is "lightweight". Yet, running multiple instances of it at once, you may get many "out of memory" messages from Windows despite 16 GB RAM. (While of course also running other things. The point is the comparison with some other IDEs/editors where running them alongside the same number of other applications doesn't cause Windows to run out of memory)
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Top
Pro
Fast and powerful
VS-Code has the speed of Sublime and the power of WebStorm. Perhaps this is the best software that Microsoft has ever created.
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Top
Con
Poor error fix suggestions
Error detection and suggestions/fixes are poor compared to IntelliJ platforms
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Top
Pro
JavaScript IntelliSense support
JavaScript IntelliSense allows Visual Studio Code to provide you with useful hints and auto-completion features while you code.
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Top
Con
A "me too" offering from MS, far behind other well established editors that it attempts to clone
Other IDEs specific to a language often offer better tools for deep programming.
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Top
Pro
Embedded Git control
Visual Studio Code has integrated Git control, guaranteeing speed, data integrity, and support for distributed, non-linear workflows.
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Top
Con
Slow launch time
Slower than it's competitors, e.g. Sublime Text.
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Top
Pro
Updated frequently
There's a new release of Visual Studio Code every month. If you are one of the insiders then releases are daily.
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Top
Con
Emmet plugin often fails on even simple p tags
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Top
Pro
ESLint integration
ESLint integrates great. You can define your rules trough .eslintrc.* as usual and vs code will autofix your code on save. So your code is always in style.
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Top
Con
Have no good default js style analyzer
In WebStorm there is analyzer that checks for warnings and highlight this in yellow, here you cannot find or add it even with plugins. It is possible to have it as errors with linter but while you are actively changing file that's not very nice.
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Top
Pro
Extensions (aka plugins) are written in JavaScript
Extensions are written in either Typescript or JavaScript.
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Top
Con
.sass linting is terrible
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Top
Pro
Active development
It's really nice to see how the code editor evolves. Every month there is a new version with great communication of new features and changes.
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Top
Con
Is not an IDE, is a text editor
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Top
Pro
Integrated task runners
Task runners display lists of available tasks and performing these tasks is as simple as a click of the mouse.
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Top
Pro
It has gotten really good
All it takes is one stop for all the features many people need.
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Top
Pro
Custom snippets support
Snippets are templates that will insert text for you and adapt it to their context, and in VSC they are highly customizable.
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Top
Pro
Huge community behind it
The ease of getting assistance and finding tutorials is increasing as the community grows.
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Top
Pro
JS typechecking
It leverages TypeScript compiler functionality to statically type check JS (type inference, JSDoc types) with "javascript.implicitProjectConfig.checkJs": true option.
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Top
Pro
Python support
Excellent Python plugin, originally created by Don Jayamanne, now hired by Microsoft to extend and maintain the extension.
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Top
Pro
Good support for new Emmet syntax
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Top
Pro
High fidelity C# plugin
The Omnisharp plugin is very powerful providing full sln, csproj, and project.json support.
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Top
Pro
Support RTL languages
It supports pretty web rtl languages like arabic languages when most of other editors don't support it.
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Top
Pro
Inline definition picking and usages finding
These features allow you to have a glance at code without opening it as a whole in a separate tab. Moreover, editing is allowed.
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, macOS, Linux
License:
MIT, Proprietary (official builds)
Multi Language Support:
Yes
Auto Complete:
Yes
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Experiences
FREE
4160
832
Checkvist
All
12
Experiences
Pros
10
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
As simple or as complex as you need
Checkvist hits a sweet spot between minimal and complexity. It gives you a host of options and extras to use on your lists, but you can completely ignore them if you don't need them and keep it very simple. This makes Checkvist a one-stop shop, regardless of what type of 'list' you need.
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Top
Con
Limited capability in the android app
Checkvist is primarily a web interface.
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Top
Pro
Tasks can be managed with custom tags
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Top
Pro
vim-like commands
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Top
Pro
Convenient search by text or tag filtering
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Pro
Converts incoming emails to todos - this is a way to enter tasks from anywhere.
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Pro
Great search
Search filters help you search for tasks by tag, due date, assignee, etc.
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Pro
Very flexible
To-do lists often need to be grouped and regrouped for clarity. The outline-based nature of Checkvist makes it easy to move things across categories, to increase and decrease priority, etc.
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Pro
Smart parsing of items
Parses markdown, html links, hashtags to become formatted text, clickable links, and tags, respectively.
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Pro
Generous set of free features
Checkvist offers many free features if you are using this individually.
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Pro
Supports comments on tasks
Any item can have a free-text comment, which can be shown or hidden as desired.
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Specs
Platforms:
Web-based, Android/iOS PWA
API:
yes
Collaborative:
yes
Dark Theme:
yes
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Experiences
$3.9
57
1
VNote
All
8
Experiences
Pros
7
Specs
Top
Pro
Able to attach files to a note
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Pro
Markdown
Markdown note-taking app.
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Top
Pro
Free, open source
Source code is available via https://github.com/tamlok/vnote/
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Top
Pro
Fast, uses C++ and QT Frameworks
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Top
Pro
Supports MathJax, Mermaid Diagrams, Flowchart.js
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Pro
Vim Mode
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Pro
Can be synced using third-party synchonization services
All files on your local disk. Utilize third-party synchronization services to work from anywhere seamlessly. (taken from https://tamlok.github.io/vnote/)
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Specs
Platforms:
Windows, Linux, Mac
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Experiences
Free
11
0
Draft
All
4
Experiences
Pros
4
Top
Pro
Markdown to-dos
Draft supports Github style Markdown Todos.
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Pro
Hemingway Mode
Draft will turn off the ability to delete anything in the document. It will be possible to only write at the end of what's already written. It won't allow going back; only forward. "Write drunk; edit sober" -Ernest Hemingway.
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Pro
Cloud sync
Documents can be imported from cloud services like Dropbox, Evernote, Box, Google Drive.
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Pro
Version control
With documents shared with Draft, any changes collaborator made by collaborators are on their own copy of the document, and the user gets to accept or ignore each individual change made.
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9
0
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