![]() If you find issues, just send me a message. this tool is free, i try to keep that as stable as possible. It works for me so far, if you are interested, i have an idea for an editor, where you can enter mixed-content and save the note direct to Evernote per API. If you need several code-blocks in one note, you can copy from a note and paste. language (the code languages - current it supports 100 languages from abab to YAML)Īt the moment it just support one code per note. It create an Evernote-export-file (.enex) with the information of: No more cluttered to-do lists or hasty scribbles in the margins of your journal. It helps you build a productivity machine by offering not just note-taking, but a calendar, bullet journaling, and lists. Unfortunately there is no library in JS that fulfills this requirements, so i wrote an aws-lambda-microservice for it and a vue-js page to make it accessible. NotePlan is a minimal, beautiful note-taking app that sets out to solve the problems that plague most apps in the field. This allows me to render code-xml that is tailored to Evernotes restricted xml-dialect, so the result looks the same on the latest browser and Evernote-clients. So i came with a custom solution by using pygments on Python. for python) and output-result on all clients is essential. As soon as something better comes along I will ditch Evernote for good.Īs a longterm Evernote-user and a developer, this is a must-have feature for me.Įspecially Syntax-highlighting, space-stability (eg. Try again.ītw, I am/was a paying customer. Now you might say to try the new Beta if you want code blocks. The latest FF is amazing - why would you not support this? By adding a time code to a task and making the task repeating, you can. There’s even an efficient way to work with regular time blocks. So you can work with time blocks in NotePlan in any direction: from your calendar into NotePlan and the other way around. Nope, there is no code block in FF on Web Client. What’s more, you can even turn your NotePlan time blocks into full calendar events. Now you might say to use the Web Client if you want code blocks. Don't even get me started on Open Source Clients. Linux is my Developer Machine (also use Mac and Windows). Nope, on Linux, there is no ***** support for Desktop (see a million threads on this topic). Now you might say to use the Desktop version if you want code blocks. Now I am wasting my morning trying to get the code blocks in Evernote Web working. Believe me or not, it is these small things that immediately tell you if a product is developed by a skilled team. For the longest time, you couldn't resize images in Evernote (WTF?). In addition, when it synced a note, the editor would jump to the top of the note - super annoying if you are working on a long note and are somewhere at the end. In the early days, I would regularly lose notebooks because the syncing sucked. At the same time, it fails to provide a stable product. ![]() Evernote seems to be the typical company that constantly throws new features on the market that no one wants or needs (Work chat?!).
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