![]() If UpNote would ever make a real macOS menubar note feature which let you add and save notes without the app being open, I’d seriously consider it over my current daily drivers. I *really* find useful the built-in right-click options Copy As Markdown and Paste From Markdown, as well as Insert Date (with Time)-features I’ve otherwise had to implement myself with 3rd party Popclip extensions. I have now set up several categories for topics, but don’t worry too much about picking the right one. Congratulations on being one of the first people to visit Please do sign up, post, reply, click likes and help make it feel populated. I haven’t had the opportunity to test collapsible sections yet but I am finding a lot of nice, useful features in the app. I’ve created this forum for people to talk about PopClip. They also show up as normal in the sidebar “Table of contents”, duly hierarchised by header type. It’s worth noting that a collapsible section can contain any/all kinds of object that you can already embed in a note (links, images, tables, dividing lines, etc.). But you can’t embed a collapsible section in another one – any attempt to do so simply toggles the existing section on or off. You can also use different sizes of header in collapsible sections. All text formatting continues to work in collapsible sections. Oops, sorry, I lied: actually, you can turn any paragraph into a collapsible section, or transform it back into a “normal” text section. Thomas is always very responsive to requests, in any case, so those wanting even more support for single-pane outlining are welcome to hassle him -) But it’s a very useful enhancement if you’re writing long notes or texts. below a specified header you can’t have multiple layers). It doesn’t look like you can turn an existing paragraph into a collapsible section, and the folding is only single-level (i.e. ![]() The collapsible section essentially consists of a header plus a body text section that can be folded into the header. Thomas has added “collapsible sections”, which is a rather neat concept taken from such perennial (but now, alas, more or less moribund) classics as Quiver. Quite an interesting update to a steadily evolving app that’s turned into a very good one: multi-platform UpNote (Mac, Windows, Linux, iOS and Android). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |