Some names for you to check out if you’re not already familiar with them: ![]() More to the point perhaps, there are so many markdown editors these days that while I completely believe you that your perfect one doesn’t exist (mind doesn’t either), I suspect you can approximate the perfect one with a collection of imperfect ones. How much time do you have? Experience coders, I’m looking forward to hearing what you suggest. In my learning a little bit of Swift I quickly came to the conclusion that, while absolutely not rocket-science, app-building probably takes a long time for the first timer to get right. I suspect you may be underestimating a little bit the trouble involved in writing an app from scratch. I agree with you on Obsidian and NotePlan. I’ve had much the same wish, not just for a markdown editor, but even more so in my case for an academic reference manager. Is there any interest in this? Do y’all think there might be a market for this? And for those of you who code, would an app like this be too much for a first-timer to build? If iA Writer and Obsidian had a baby, basically. I write my blog posts in Ulysses, and annotate Scripture there as well for my own edification.Īfter much thought, I’m considering learning SwiftUI and Swift so I can build a macOS and iOS app with a focus on markdown rendering and wiki-style links. Like Markdown footnotes, or better-looking type in a long numbered list, or file names. ![]() Noteplan is good, but I don’t need the “plan” part, and there are several features I wish it supports that it does not support. Obsidian isn’t native, and I don’t like it. I wanted to include links to meeting notes and the like throughout the day, which led me down a rabbit hole towards Obsidian and Noteplan. For years, I’ve written down what I do for work every day in Day One.
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