![]() I would greatly appreciate any feedback - I am an amateur developer so the code is far from nice but I tried to keep it clean and with a minimal amount of excellent ideas that later become hieroglyphic studies to understand what I meant then. I want to start with one tab open with index.js, and end up with two tabs, each with index.js, ideally in a split window. Searching for a keyboard shortcut to open the active file in a new tab in a split window. I have many more ideas (they are in the README) and hope that this 1.0 version will be useful to someone. All Ive been able to find is cmd + K O, which opens the active file in another window. shorten my suffering when choosing a title for a one shot note - just press enter and a readable date will be used use my favourite editor which is much better than the one I could write quickly edit a note via its serial number or title: `note e todo` ![]() create a note directly from the command line: `note q my first /oh a title/ note #france` I finally decided to write one to get rid of the zillions of paper scraps with cryptic things like "7654" or "go to JK to get RF". Why another note taking application? Because the ones I tried are really great but lack the simplicity I need. There's no need to add features into it like encryption or backups because that can be handled elsewhere such as putting the notes directory into Dropbox or having a backup script reference that directory to backup (personally I rsync it with a bunch of other directories to an external HD in a daily cron job).Īfter years of activity in the main threads I am jumping in with an note taking application I wrote over the last few days. There hasn't been a commit to the project in a year because the script is basically done and works. This tool was created after ~20 years worth of plain text note taking. The note tool works the same with or without it being a git repo. You can choose to `git init` a git repo in there if you'd like. There's also no git integration built into the tool because your notes directory is literally a directory of plain text files. There's no built in things like searching because you can grep your plain text notes at your leisure, and since the files are dated that means you can go in there and delete your notes as needed too. It also supports taking input from stdin so you can save the output of programs or your clipboard into your notes. ![]() You can add 1 line notes by just typing `notes hey this is my cool note` or run `notes` without arguments to open this month's notes file in your $EDITOR. Mine is designed to be used from the command line with the least amount of effort possible while giving you the most flexibility you can realistically ask for. ![]() Mine dates your files like YYYY-MM.txt for easy access later on and then appends to the file for a specific month.ģ. Note: With a touch keyboard, youll need to press the Ctrl key to view some shortcuts. For example, to create a new picture in Paint, press Ctrl + N. If a letter is underlined in a menu, press the Altkey and the underlined key together instead of choosing that menu item. Mine is a zero dependency ~20 line bash script.Ģ. In others, pressing the Alt or F10 keys shows available keyboard shortcuts. Some noticeable differences between my script and theirs are:ġ. ![]()
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