marktext
stackedit
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marktext | stackedit | |
---|---|---|
73 | 7 | |
44,513 | 21,311 | |
1.9% | - | |
4.9 | 5.2 | |
about 1 month ago | 10 months ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
marktext
- Show HN: I've built open-source, collaborative, WYSIWYG Markdown editor
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Pagkatapos ng pagpapalit-palit ng mga OS, naglipat na ako sa EndeavourOS + GNOME 44
Marktext - A Markdown file editor. How to write in Markdown
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Lightweight minimalistic Markdown editor for OpenSUSE
Well, see comments below but you're wrong. I now huse Marktext and it's simply perfect.
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Which Markdown Editors Have Collapsible Sections?
I tried MarkText, but the collapsibility seemed terribly buggy, and a brief internet search did not increase hope.
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Configuring pen buttons and cursor in Excalidraw
I normally take Markdown notes with quick sketches from time to time with a Wacom tablet. I've used Xournal++ and Marktext to do all this, exporting my sketches into image files and inserting them into Marktext. However, I am starting to feel fatigued with this workflow and I discovered that Obsidian and the Excalidraw plugin could be an all-in-one solution for what I do, instead of having to work between two apps and exporting my sketches manually.
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Writing down what I do – in Obsidian
I have used syncthing + marktext[0] and or ghostwriter[1] depending on the content of my notes. For a daily journal I like to use ghostwriter as it has almost no distraction and it forces me to focus. It just got shifted over to being maintained by the KDE team and I really enjoy it.
I liked marktext over joplin for similar reasons. But I am probably a little overzealous in my search for distraction free note taking. I assume joplin provides more feature sets, I just happened to want less features for what I do on a day to day.
- Looking for a Markdown Editor
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A bit weird, but is there word-processing software (like MS Word) that uses markdown (or similar) ?
I know I am a little late, but I have had great experience with MarkText (FOSS, a bit buggy, but the best at what it does by far), Ghostwriter (FOSS, a good editor, recently absorbed by KDE), Visual Studio Code/VSCodium with [Markdown Editor](andhttps://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=zaaack.markdown-editor) (a WYSISWG markdown editing extention) and Obsidian (which I think you already have heard of).
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Converge ICT outages (no internet access, at Oct 18 12:32 PM). I wonder why?
Written using marktext
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MarkText - free minimalistic desktop markdown editor
And I didn find any software except Typora! Now I restart my research and found MarkText
stackedit
- Show HN: I've built open-source, collaborative, WYSIWYG Markdown editor
- I present to you: The textbook CEO
- StackEdit – In-Browser Markdown Editor
- Stackedit bowser markdown free text editor web app github
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Write Plain Text Files
I mourn that StackEdit [1] got abandoned. It's online markdown editor that can use git as a backend. Fully cross platform editing (in browser) with synced all text. I used it with GitHub private repository for all my notes but editing on mobile was really buggy. So I moved to notion (unfortunately).
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Gollum – A simple, Git-powered wiki with a sweet API and local frontend
I would love to have something like Notion but using git for all data storage and edit history.
There is https://stackedit.io/ offering it but I stopped using it because of bugs when trying to edit on mobile. And it basically abandoned for the last 2 years https://github.com/benweet/stackedit (only some deps updates, nothing more).
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GhostWriter is a distraction free Markdown editor
Most dedicated markdown editors all end up using the same JS code editor components like Ace, CodeMirror or Monaco, and those editors have great vim keybindings usually as extensions or options. See if the tool you're using lets you flip those vim bindings on. For some editors they expose it as an option and for others you have to hack around with the source (for example enabling it with stackedit, a PWA markdown editor like ghostwriter, is possible with same hacking: https://github.com/benweet/stackedit/issues/254 ).
What are some alternatives?
Zettlr - Your One-Stop Publication Workbench
notekit - A GTK3 hierarchical markdown notetaking application with tablet support.
ghostwriter - Text editor for Markdown
wordpress-markdown-git - :loop: WordPress plugin to add file content (Markdown, Jupyter notebooks) from a Git based VCS to a WordPress post; replaces https://github.com/gis-ops/md-github-wordpress
KeenWrite - Free, open-source, cross-platform desktop Markdown text editor with live preview, string interpolation, and math.
markdown-preview.nvim - markdown preview plugin for (neo)vim
medium-to-markdown - Convert medium link to markdown
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
Gollum - A simple, Git-powered wiki with a sweet API and local frontend.
Trilium Notes - Build your personal knowledge base with Trilium Notes
emacs-livedown - Emacs plugin for Livedown.