![]() I wish that notes could have arbitrarily-deeply-nested childrenĪ quick skim of the Joplin site didn’t really make it clear what a “notebook” is – are you just talking about being able to easily define hierarchies of notes? Or do you mean a full-on, infinitely-nested-list style app like Athens / Logseq / Roam, where every list bullet is considered to be a separate note? And where all the notes are connected as a big graph? Notebag a minimal Markdown app with tag support.kb, a minimal text-oriented command-line note manager.Dendron, a hierarchical note-taking editor based on VS Code.(coming soon, made by me) Noteworthy, which aims to be an extensible, open-source alternative to Obsidian and Typora, with a focus on wikilinks and excellent math support.(coming soon) Athens Research, an open-source alternative to Roam.R Studio includes an awesome Markdown publishing experience, similar to Jupyter Notebooks.Neuron Notes a neat Zettelkasten system written in Haskell, based on GitHub repos.logseq, a GitHub-hosted alternative to Roam.foambubble, a family of VS Code extensions to help search + organize your notes.RemNote converts your notes into spaced-repetition flash cards, similar to Anki.Zettlr a Markdown editor focused on publishing / academics.Obsidian, a split-pane Markdown editor focused on bidirectional linking.Typora, a nicely polished Markdown editor – has the best support for math input I’ve seen.In the process of making Noteworthy I’ve been inspired by all the other great note-taking apps out there. ![]() When the pandemic started, I found myself with a lot of free time, so I decided it was time to make my own note-taking app called Noteworthy! I’ve been using it exclusively for my notes the past 3-4 months and it’s almost ready for public release! I had no idea where to look for the most “up to date” version of anything. So at this point, my notes were spread betweeen paper, OneNote, Typora, and Overleaf.
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