fwiw you can import text files (.txt or .md) directly
That’s nice, but importing (or exporting) files is a huge pain compared to copy and paste, since most of the tools I use don’t really have files as such, or if they do there’s a multi-step process on both sides of finding the file, opening an import function, answering stuff, dragging the file (or worse, having to browse if the import-ee doesn’t support drag/drop).
Compare that to 1) select, 2) Ctrl-C, 3) Alt-Tab, 4) Ctrl-V. No mousing unless it’s for the initial select, if that. Plus, apart from Typora and Notebooks, most of the tools I use don’t even have “files” that would be meaningful to import, so I’d instead be copy-pasting into something else to then create the export file...
Anyway, I’m going to stop here, because my use cases aren’t necessarily what’s best for your project. I’m a CRIMPer (Compulsive Researcher of Information Management Programs), which means I can miss the forest for the trees at times… especially since I have an awful lot of trees, in different software, in which I have a lot of data, notes, ideas, and half-written books.
(I haven’t even mentioned Scrivener before this point… or ConnectedText, whose calendar your date-based pages reminded me of. I actually used CT for quite a while and then realized that I couldn’t really use the text anywhere else; that was before I caught the markdown religion.)
Paste out now handles block-references well (they just appear as the text that appears in the references)
Should also paste out pretty nice into most apps
Pasting in from plain text (and from scrivener) keeps formatting
OneNote provides some very strange formatting when you try to paste it into our app (or most other apps) -- but it’ll give you the right outline structure if you use Command-Shift-V for paste as plain text.
That’s nice, but importing (or exporting) files is a huge pain compared to copy and paste, since most of the tools I use don’t really have files as such, or if they do there’s a multi-step process on both sides of finding the file, opening an import function, answering stuff, dragging the file (or worse, having to browse if the import-ee doesn’t support drag/drop).
Compare that to 1) select, 2) Ctrl-C, 3) Alt-Tab, 4) Ctrl-V. No mousing unless it’s for the initial select, if that. Plus, apart from Typora and Notebooks, most of the tools I use don’t even have “files” that would be meaningful to import, so I’d instead be copy-pasting into something else to then create the export file...
Anyway, I’m going to stop here, because my use cases aren’t necessarily what’s best for your project. I’m a CRIMPer (Compulsive Researcher of Information Management Programs), which means I can miss the forest for the trees at times… especially since I have an awful lot of trees, in different software, in which I have a lot of data, notes, ideas, and half-written books.
(I haven’t even mentioned Scrivener before this point… or ConnectedText, whose calendar your date-based pages reminded me of. I actually used CT for quite a while and then realized that I couldn’t really use the text anywhere else; that was before I caught the markdown religion.)
New version pushed up
Paste out now handles block-references well (they just appear as the text that appears in the references)
Should also paste out pretty nice into most apps
Pasting in from plain text (and from scrivener) keeps formatting
OneNote provides some very strange formatting when you try to paste it into our app (or most other apps) -- but it’ll give you the right outline structure if you use Command-Shift-V for paste as plain text.