![]() Original announcement Commercial, free during beta No () nor () (but issues are open, feel free to +1 or even contribute a patch if you know ()!) Only sourcecode mode (cannot hide markup, links cannot be beautified)Īctively in development (so the following issues may resolve fast)īug with loading external pictures under https Inline preview + TOC navigation (Table of Content) No sourcecode mode (cannot show Markdown) ![]() Inline preview + Presentation support too + Bibliography support + Footnotes In the end, we could say it's the Markdown equivalent of Zim Desktop Wiki, they are very similar in their philosophy and feature set. The extensive import/export from/to LaTeX and DOCX is a killer feature for researchers which can ease collaborations. Note: this software was initially made for scientists, hence the extensive support for attachments, bibliography and footnotes. It is thus easy to have multiple notebooks and switch between them. Notebook paradigm: you select a folder, and all your notes will be stored inside. Lots of importing and exporting formats: HTML, PDF, DOCX, LaTeX (great for scientific collaborations!) No sourcecode mode (but there is a readability mode to highlight non-markup text content) Inline preview (but mixing both rendered and some unrendered but dimmed down markdown formatting, eg, bold and italics) It is a personal favorite, it managed to catch up with older editors in terms of features (or even surpass them). Note: this project is in very active development and already has a big community. Currently working on a full session manager with more advanced autosave.īasic support for attachments (either in a folder defined by user, or transparently uploaded to an online repository) Support for complex constructs, such as graphs, such as vega-lite, or mermaidīasic autosave support (check File > Autosave). Support for images, but not for embedded videos Support for a lot of markdown constructs: tasks, code blocks, HTML block, Mouse-friendly interface (easy to insert a markdown construct from menus, or by click at the beginning of the line, or by highlighting a text, options are then displayed) ![]() MarkTextĬross-platform (Windows + MacOSX + Linux) Note that almost none of the app here supports multi-document tabs (yet?), except for the note-taking oriented apps. I am not demonstrating image insertion but they can almost all preview images, both local and remote. There are basically two types of inline preview: per block (refresh the styling after you leave a block, eg, by going to the next line/block) or per character (ie, as you type). In some sense, this is very similar to what LyX pioneered for LaTeX. This is also sometimes called WYSIWYG, but this is different here as you do not necessarily have to use the toolbars to format the text: with inline preview you can just input markup code and it will display the result dynamically. Inline preview (aka realtime preview or WYSIWYG)Īll the following editors allow you to type Markdown markup, and automagically display the resulting style instantly inside the editor (no split-pane for preview). Note that I have personally tested all the ones running on Windows. I also chose to leave split-pane only editors (ie, without inline preview nor styling) out of the picture, as there are plenty and are explicitly excluded by OP. I will describe a few main features non exhaustively, you should consult the websites to get more information. I will here describe two categories of editors that can fit OP's purpose depending on what exact kind of previewing is expected ( inline preview vs inline styling). Note that I had additional requirements to realtime/inline previewing, such as: multidocuments tabbing, table of contents for quick navigation, lightweight, markup hiding/showing (sourcecode mode) with styling kept and finally autosave of documents and of session. There's no current perfect solution, but there are a few ones that might be worth a try. Having a similar need to the OP, I searched the whole web for current solutions.
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