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- #CLOUD OUTLINER 2 INSTALL#
- #CLOUD OUTLINER 2 ANDROID#
- #CLOUD OUTLINER 2 CODE#
- #CLOUD OUTLINER 2 WINDOWS#
something like SPOILER buttons on forums.Įxample: I have a ToDo note like this: Install software X Configure software XSome text about software X Documentation:Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. I think that in some situation have the possibility to collapsible portion of text will make more readable our notes. With a dropdown feature, all this would be much easier and faster to achieve
#CLOUD OUTLINER 2 ANDROID#
A privacy feature: no, I'm not talking about hiding sensitive data where encryption is used, but it requires typing a password, waiting several seconds EN to decrypt (on my Android device) and type password any time I open the note. Have you tried a Table of Contents (internal note links)? These can be a handy way of tying together a bunch of notes into one so that it functions much like a collapsible outline. In this case, I'd say goodbye to collapsible outlines. Basically, there are tradeoffs with any app (as I am sure you know), and you'll save yourself a lot of headaches adapting yourself to what's available. It's great to make suggestions (I do it on a daily basis!), but you never know if or when something will get implemented, and even if it comes to the app, it may not appear quite the way you want it. More importantly, I'd design your workflow around the app that is, not the app you want it to be, or the app it may become in the future. It is probably possible to do, but unlikely. enex, which isn't terribly adept with this kind of stuff (in my experience).
#CLOUD OUTLINER 2 CODE#
Evernote has to work across platforms and it is based on a kind of website code called. My guess would be that this will not come to Evernote in the near future. Welcome to the forums! Your suggestion has been made before, I am sure the developers have seen it, but no one is commenting, and they have a policy not to comment on anything behind the scenes, so you are unlikely to hear anything. Is this in the works or at least on the radar? One feature I'm really missing is the ability to collapse indented text with a simple click to the left of its parent. will be out of your reach.Īfter almost 10 years of using OneNote under Windows, I just received my new MacBook Pro, and I chose Evernote (over read-only Outline) to be its replacement. If you know that you are only going to be using a single platform, then you may have more options, though even then, things like shared notebooks, powerful searching, etc. In short, I think if you want an app that will work no matter what platform you are using, then Evernote is the best solution.
#CLOUD OUTLINER 2 WINDOWS#
This thread is for Windows users, and as far as I know, Circus Ponies has no app for Windows. On the other hand, Circus Ponies only works on a single platform, and Evernote works pretty much everywhere. There are trade-offs to be made with each application, and in the case of Evernote, it often has fewer features / less powerful features than apps designed to work on a single platform. In the end, you have to choose the application that best fits your use case, so you should make sure to look around at your options. To be honest, a lot of other applications do this or that better than Evernote. as suggested above, there is always copy / paste from other apps if complicated outliing is really necessary.Ĭircus Ponies is a very good app, and it arguably does a better job than Evernote with outlines. If evernote can pull it off, it will put them well ahead of a lot of competitors. nevermind any of the evernote app-specific obstacles that might exist. this is just a guess, but i think outlining is tricky beyond the basics that you can get with something like or in html.
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Links, though, are pretty widely supported across platforms inside apps and, of course, in browsers. you never know, and it never hurts to ask. So while no one should count on a new feature request, it never hurts, IMO, for users to keep on making the request for it. The marketing made it sound like Evernote had just discovered/implemented one of key features of all time. Then one day, boom! An EN Blog was published releasing Note Links. I have watched feature requests like "Note Links" be requested for several years by many users, all the while the usual reasons for NOT implementing the feature were repeatedly given by Evernote and some of the evangelists. It is not clear how a new feature gets approved inside of Evernote.
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