
- #Taskpaper sort by alphabetical order android#
- #Taskpaper sort by alphabetical order code#
- #Taskpaper sort by alphabetical order windows#
#Taskpaper sort by alphabetical order code#
It uses Markdown for editing content, which keeps things light and compatible with many other applications, but it keeps the code mostly behind the scenes so you barely need to use it or even see it. This app is beautifully minimal, putting the focus on your information and on being as non-intrusive to your workflow as possible. I will end this post with a comparison table.īear is a minimal-UI app from the people at Shiny Frog.
#Taskpaper sort by alphabetical order android#
This means I have zero information about these tools in the context of Android and Linux. All of my input below is from a point of view biased toward my own use case as described above. In this post I will describe five note-taking tools (in alphabetic order):īear | Evernote | GoodNotes | Joplin | OneNoteįor each of these five tools, I installed them and spent some serious time ramping up and basically “trying it on” to see if I should make it my new go-to-tool.

Finally, my extent of use is somewhere between “heavy” and “obsessive”: I have well over 3,000 notes, and I reference, edit, organize, or add notes every day.
#Taskpaper sort by alphabetical order windows#
My platform need is also “combined,” as I use Mac, iOS, and Windows - although my Windows usage comes to only about 25% of my total computer time.

Over the course of about eighteen months, I downloaded multiple tools, fully imported my entire notes collection into most of them, and attempted to integrate them into my workflow. These were tiny hiccups that I tried to just live with, but they created big enough interruptions to my workflow that I eventually decided I had to find a different tool. I spent many wonderful years as an enthusiastic Evernote user and evangelist, but I started running into issues. I detailed this journey along with some Evernote pointers in my blog post, Evernote is Awesome.

A few years later I moved all my notes into OneNote, and in 2012 I moved everything into Evernote. In the mid 1990s, after years of carrying around a Daytimer, I entered all my notes into my Palm Pilot.
