Most markdown editors have plain text on one side and rendered text on the other. Typora has a single Wysiwyg panel. You can edit it as if it were plain markdown, for example you can bold something by putting stars around it. But you can also edit it as if it were wysiwyg, by doing ctrl I, or through a menu. More importantly, it doesn’t take up a lot of screen space and it’s much more aesthetically pleasing to not have a bunch of plain text. The only other single panel MD editor I’m aware of is marktext, which was significantly less polished last time I tried it about a year ago.
Typora also supports custom themes, tree style notes based on directories, various exports, a gui for making tables, and a bunch of other features. I consider it to be a second generation editor and will never go back to the first generation dual panel editors.
Could you use it to make something like xpath-directed changes to an XML document? Like not just regexy things but if this tag or attribute in a tag does or doesn’t exist, add this.
Software: Typora. Need: Markdown editing. Other programs I’ve tried: Boostnote, StackEdit, VSCode, Marktext
Most markdown editors have plain text on one side and rendered text on the other. Typora has a single Wysiwyg panel. You can edit it as if it were plain markdown, for example you can bold something by putting stars around it. But you can also edit it as if it were wysiwyg, by doing ctrl I, or through a menu. More importantly, it doesn’t take up a lot of screen space and it’s much more aesthetically pleasing to not have a bunch of plain text. The only other single panel MD editor I’m aware of is marktext, which was significantly less polished last time I tried it about a year ago.
Typora also supports custom themes, tree style notes based on directories, various exports, a gui for making tables, and a bunch of other features. I consider it to be a second generation editor and will never go back to the first generation dual panel editors.
Supported. I use Typora for all my creative writing, it’s distraction free, does its work great, and helps me export to FF.net and AO3 really easily.
Could you use it to make something like xpath-directed changes to an XML document? Like not just regexy things but if this tag or attribute in a tag does or doesn’t exist, add this.