There’s some 3rd party work on open-sourcing the. There are obviously a ton of note taking apps across the appleverse, but Notability has a ton of followers and usage. I’d also like to see the integration of Notability into Joplin.To do the back and forth transfer of the attached note file in Joplin to the Notes app, I’d assume the iPad OS/iOS sharing feature will need to be utilized. This could look something like the current PDF display, with the note attachment displayed as a file link, and the preview beneath.
Have the ability to take notes directly from the notes app and display in Joplin, with the ability to edit them and have the resulting edit reflected in Joplin.Because of this, I think I’d like to try something like the following:īased on the underlying OS (iPad OS/iOS or Android), rather than building/integrating drawing features based on a drawing library or standing one up from scratch, I’d like to integrate the OS’ native Pen feature set into Joplin. I’ve used some pen implementations on different devices in the past, and because the experience was so bad, I never ended up using it. Pen development (at least in mind) can either be awesome, or just really terrible depending on the implementation.
There’s a couple things I want to keep at the forefront of my mind while developing this feature. IMO, this tablet would have the largest initial ROI on feature distribution. I’d first like to focus first on pen integration with the iPad.
I’ve been using Joplin for a while now, so I want to give back some. I’m no electron expert, and it will take me a bit to ramp up to how I need to integrate features into Joplin, but I’ll do my best. I currently work for a company developing medical devices. Quick background on myself: I’m a software engineer, and I have a lot of experience working on WPF Windows desktop applications with material design and MVVM. I’d like your thoughts and opinions on how you guys think this would support your needs. You could pre-populate a notebook with pages or add page as you go along, all new pages (in that section) will now be A4.I’m going to take a crack at adding some pen support to the Joplin app. It is not the most elegant solution but it works. In your desired notebook (or a new one) click the view tab and choose paper size, select save current page as a template, Name the template and check set as default for new pages in the current section. If you want 64 bit it's available under "other download options" It should open up on the link I sent.if it doesn't.Go here and follow the link for the Windows Desktop version. It was also made available as a free download, that option still exists. So the UWP (Universal Windows Platform is the moniker for all the apps that come in the Microsoft Store, they are different from standard Windows apps that come with an installer) version comes with Windows.Onenote Desktop or Onenote 2016 used to be a part of Office 365 and they took it out.
Probably as many ways as there are to use a real notebook. Seems like everyone has very different ideas about how a digital notebook should function. Maybe it's too powerful, maybe it fails to capture the true power of a digital notebook, but for some reason I constantly wish someone would create a solid replacement for it, though I can't put my finger on exactly what they'd have to change to make it perfect. That being said, onenote just doesn't seem to do it for me. This has been improving, and Microsoft seems committed to getting all the useful features from desktop into UWP. One note 2016 is old, but has a large number of features that have not yet been added to the UWP version. UWP is newer, less glitchy, and a consistent experience across devices One note 2016 or the desktop version is a traditionally installed program that was bundled with some office suites. In this context uwp refers to the app store version of one note.