> I haven’t found any great Markdown writing app available on Linux
I'm curious what your requirements are here - Markdown support is pretty basic for essentially any text editor, but if you're looking for something more graphical, StackEdit is pretty nice. I've used it on occasion when at foreign machines and I don't have a Vim or Spacemacs instance handy.
I put the text on http://mylifesuxnow.com through a HTML to Markdown converter, manually formatted the part without formatting by looking at the screenshots, then dumped the whole thing into https://stackedit.io/ and exported "Using template".
Edit: Looks like the host didn't like the traffic. Here's a mirror: https://stackedit.io/viewer#!provider=gist&gistId=b9a1852a0a17e334f041&filename=wfre
This is not my work, the link was originally published on the UnknownCheats forum, but I thought here would be a good place to share :)
having screenshots of the application on the website would be nice. I want to know what it looks like. But from what I read, it's similar to https://stackedit.io/ but as software.
Haha. That's why I use https://stackedit.io/. I have a bunch of notes there and it's saved automatically so no worries. And it's easy to open/edit them on the fly.
The notes are in markdown so it's easy to insert some codes too.
Fire Emblem Universe is the best resource and community for rom hacking GBAFE.
On top of Nightmare and Feditor you'll need Event Assembler and the suite of tools based around it. In fact, you could make a full hack without Nightmare or FEditor, as long as you have Event Assembler. Nightmare has been obsoleted by NMM2CSV for example, which outputs Event Assembler files.
There is the Ultimate Tutorial by Blazer, which is a great resource. However it is largely outdated, particularly the sections on Nightmare and music insertion.
The New Ultimate Tutorial is a work in progress, but it's a pretty good resource for learning how to structure a project and use Event Assembler for all of your hacking. New sections are being added regularly.
Hey there, excellent question.
You are correct that OneNote requires an Internet connection. This isn't a technical limitation, rather just a choice by Microsoft. Hopefully they'll add offline support down the road.
In the meantime there are plenty of other options. Before I get into them, remember that you can try any of these out right now if you have Chrome on your current Windows laptop. You can install them then disconnect from WiFi to see exactly how they will perform on a Chromebook.
Here are just a few popular ones.
Google Keep - Supports a note format, including lists (and note sharing). There are limits to note length, however.
Text - A really basic text editor. If you take lengthy notes, this may be the best option.
StackEdit - A markdown editor. While this has a learning curve, it's what I use to take notes for my classes. It allows me to type very quickly and also add in formatting as I go. When I'm done I have my content and really nice formatting to go with it. Even though this isn't a downloadable app, it does work offline.
For my courses I primarily use StackEdit (in the past I used Textdown). I also use Google Keep for shorter notes and reminders because it syncs so well across all of my devices.
I'm sure others will have suggestions for their favorite apps as well :)
Ah sorry, I just landed from Vegas after working a tradeshow the past week. My schedule is kind of wonky from being out of town for a week, but can probably meet during the week except Wednesday.
Here's my bottle list
protip: type up your review in an online editor markdown editor like https://stackedit.io/editor so you can just copy pasta the review when you are ready to post it rather than formatting it after the fact.
Try StackEdit. It integrates with Google Drive. You can then export your Drive document to Word, if you really want to. If all you want to do is convert a Markdown document to Word format there are standalone tools for that (such as Pandoc), and I don't see much benefit in making another one just to be web-based.
If you're using YAIR or something else to pull the markdown out, Stackedit is great for rendering your markdown for you; you can then either copy/paste it into google docs, or use it's built-in export functions.
Offline and online! Stackedit, my absolute favorite app, it's a PWA so it works offline and it syncs with a github account, google drive account, dropbox account, blogger, zendesk, google photos and literally everything else. Super useful for taking notes in markdown format!
I would recomend to take a look into markdown. It is pretty easy (will take you like 10 minutes to learn it fully), and can be converted into html pretty quickly.
Take a look into https://stackedit.io/
Reddit uses "Markdown" for both text posts and comments. Here is a markdown cheat sheet: https://www.markdownguide.org/cheat-sheet/
You can also paste your post/comment on this markdown editor to see how it will look when submitted to reddit: https://stackedit.io/app
I just found https://stackedit.io/ which was awesome to let me preview markdown as I type, and it saves drafts without login, or syncs across devices if I login. Not connected to github though, but copy/paste works pretty ok. :)
I think the easiest thing you can do is do a side-by-side. Separating the preview from the textarea.
This way people can easily edit the text and see the results with minimal technical impact on your side.
Once that works, you can extend the "textarea" with a more wysiwyg UI to select text and add markdown snippets. If you look at some of the markdown editors online, you'll see that they add some of the styling to the textarea itself to (https://stackedit.io/app# for example). You'll see that headings are also styled the same but with the # in front of it.
I think you'll always need 2 separate views, because otherwise you'll be building a WYSIWYG editor that converts items to Markdown (and the other way around). How would you make adding an image 'in place' for example without losing the benefits of markdown.
Last thing I want to note, don't make this yourself ;) (but do understand how they work). I can't imagine there aren't any good options available on npm for this.
If you're limited to browser only apps, stackedit.io was what I was using before moving over to macdown and 1writer. It's essentially the same thing, a WYSIWYG markdown editor that would allow you to copy and paste both raw markdown and transformed rich text.
It's FEditor. That's the problem.
Seriously though, if you want to make a project or more changes, look into buildfiles.
I've a brief outline of the wiki over at Google Docs
Now it's completely in Markdown, so I'd recommend using an editor like Stack Editor to get a preview of how it'll look.
(ps: I still can't edit the wiki)
or you could use an online markdown editor which will let you see the post with formatting then just copy paste that when you are ready to post.
this is the one i use:
it even has WYSIWYG functionality.
If you understand the game (ie Heroes, Abilities, Items etc) then I found this really improves your overall play. https://stackedit.io/viewer#!provider=gist&gistId=9360177&filename=dota%20guide%20for%20people%20that%20don't%20need%20a%20guide
These projects may be of more interest :
> Do you have an example of something you like that you want to build something similar to? I really want to eventually build Ulysses app for the web. I have done a similar thing I'm on version 2 but extremely basic with mongo, react and express.
Before getting to Ulysses I want to create it similar to this stackedit. I've just started research how to store data to google drive.
If I ever get to apply for work, would having a few small apps better than one fully-fledged one? I feel I've been working on different iterations of this app for a few years (exploring different technologies with it: from Wordpress, laravel, pure node, vue, react)
I wasn't able to get the above to work, but here is an emoji-free version in markdown. Use a markdown editor to read it. Two browser-based markdown editors are dillinger.io and stackedit.io.
> Don't rely on client-side authorization for protecting API calls.
I'm looking on how to protect features that didn't goes through backend (so no API calls). Example features that I can think of:
How do you properly secure this kind of app (e.g. behind a paywall)? Only way I can think of is SSR?
stackedit.io is also a markdown editor that can be integrated with google drive among other options, has some additional features like folders and such, but beyond that is also very simple.
For people not confident writing HTML, you can try StackEdit. It is a Markdown editor that can publish to Blogger.
Looks like it is also compatible with WordPress but haven't tried this.
Since Chromebooks can run Android apps, I would go with JotterPad+ from the Android store. Alternately, you can use the browser-based stackedit.io with a cloud service, which is an OSS application.
This one looks really nice. Inline-styles the markup, previews, and has convenience buttons at the top. For VS code I just know very basic ones (i.e. text plus live preview, no convenient editing).
Tbh I never found one either. I really like the experience on https://stackedit.io/ but the integration has never been successful for me. I also like the editor on stackexchange, but the current version is not OS.
I find StackEdit is useful tool for markdown editing. You get your markdown on the left pane, and a live preview of your markdown on the right. It doesn't translate directly to reddit's markdown limitations, but it is definitely serviceable.
Here's what I have so far. If you DM me with your experiences with certain businesses, I can add them on the list. Any constructive criticism will be greatly appreciated.
>Written with StackEdit.
DFHack allows saving and loading stockpile presets. They are portable and can be used in another fortress. Though you probably know that already.
Mai mult, poți să cauți pluginuri pentru markdown, să vezi în timp real cum ar ieși formatat.
Sau un editor online pe care le poți lega la Dropbox sau ce mai vrei tu, cum ar fi https://stackedit.io/app# sau https://dillinger.io/
I like to use https://stackedit.io/ for a professional reporting format for Jupyter notebooks. You have to download the .ipynb as a .md file, upload it to stackedit and then download the final file, so it is a bit more work, but it ends up looking quite nice!
>markdown/pandoc/latex
I would probably use this combo anyway especially for humanities. markdown is incredibly easy to write and especially (for me at least) easy to read in its plaintext form
then I would use pandoc to hop to latex for the finishing touches
for markdown I like stackedit.io it has a limit to how large the edit window can be but it's quite large so you might not run into that limitation
if you do run into that issue it still gives you a great mental model of what markdown syntax means and if you've made a mistake while you're getting used to it. After a while you really don't need the preview; you can just type in markdown and see the output in your head.
Since Reddit's MD is shit, please paste the following on StackEdit to get the explanation. Sorry that I can't put it here directly as I wanted to assure that you get the concept.
​
Since $p^2=3\times q2$
Thus, $p^2$ must be divisible by $3$.
Thus, $p^2=3\times(some\ positive\ integer)$, say $a$.
Thus, $p^2=3\times a$
Thus, $p=\pm\sqrt{3\times a}$
Since $p$ is an integer, it can't have $\sqrt{3}$ as a factor. There has to be another $3$ that comes when we factorise $a$.
Let $a=3\times b$ (where $b$ is a positive integer).
Now,
$p=\pm\sqrt{3\times3\times b}$
or,
$p=\pm 3\times\sqrt{b}$
Again, since $p$ is an integer, it can't have $\sqrt{b}$ as a factor if $\sqrt{b}$ is not an integer.
Thus let $\sqrt{b}=r$ (where $r$ is a positive integer).
Now,
$p=\pm 3\times r$
$p^2=3^2\times r^2$
And hence we got $p^2=3^2r^2$.
Since $p^2=3\times q^2$
Thus, $p^2$ must be divisible by $3$.
Thus, $p^2=3\times(some\ integer)$, say $a$.
Thus, $p^2=3\times a$
Thus, $p=\pm\sqrt{3\times a}$
Since $p$ is an integer, it can't have $\sqrt{3}$ as a factor. There has to be another $3$ that comes when we factorise $a$.
Let $a=3\times b$ (where $b$ is an integer).
Now,
$p=\pm\sqrt{3\times3\times b}$
or,
$p=\pm 3\times\sqrt{b}$
Again, since $p$ is an integer, it can't have $\sqrt{b}$ as a factor if $\sqrt{b}$ is not an integer.
Thus let $\sqrt{b}=r$ (where $r$ is an integer).
Now,
$p=\pm 3\times r$
$p^2=3^2\times r^2$
And hence we got $p^2=3^2r^2$.
Do you already have a blog? Is it on Blogger, WordPress, GitHub, or similar site, or does your blogging backend accept either HTML or Markdown? Then I'd recommend StackEdit.
Since it's an in-browser editor, it should work on an iPad, although I've never tried. One issue I see mentioned in reviews is that, when using it in a browser that doesn't support add-ons, you have to be online to start your session by going to the link, although you don't have to stay online to do your actual work.
On computers, there's a Chrome app for it, and I don't think you have to be online to use that, but I could be wrong. File storage is local (in the browser.)
You do have to be online to publish your posts to your blog, but StackEdit handles that for you, remembering your Blogger or WordPress site details. You just need to remember to add a title and tags/categories in the File Properties, or use a YAML block directly in the text.
It just would be easier to build this for the web and also you could reach way more users... But a nice "my custom wiki" would be neat indeed! I'd like to see a markdown wiki where you can struckture the files in folder strucktures :) Just like https://notion.so or https://stackedit.io
Very slick, and almost what I've been wanting for ages, since I gave up on Treepad.
If only it could be cross-bred with https://stackedit.io so it can be used via the cloud across multiple devices, but not in the direction that app.thoughtplan.com took (i.e. no local storage).
Most of the time I'm just improvising for the first few hours, then I start making an organized list of modules, elements and approaches - just when it starts to matter.
I usually use stackedit.io for that sorta task.
Stackedit.io lets you take free web notes that can sync to your cloud e.g. Google drive. It can support notes, equations and UML diagrams in markdown. Stackedit is also accessible offline after first loading. Good luck.
I recently used an app called StackEdit and it is a browser based note app which let's you log in using your Google account and use a cloud storage service (Google Drive, Dropbox or GitHub) for storing the notes. You can log in to your account on any browser and access the notes. When you are offline you can still view the notes (though they aren't synced to the latest ones). You can also write notes while offline and once you are online it'll sync. The main drawback with this app is that the website is not that smooth on mobile. And even on computer it doesn't have the smoothest interface. But I think a wiki server might support similar feature.
Reddit uses Markdown for formatting, so you can just google for a markdown editor like this one.
The version of MD here is a little different though. I don't think there's a sub for this, but you could start one. Or, since you've already got this thread going, you could just leave some comments with other stuff you want to test out.
If you do any formatting with reddit, it uses markdown for your messages :) All those Github README and such use it too. Dropbox has a neat version called Paper they just released, it will let you write notes with markdown and convert it on the fly, you can download the source markdown file afterwards. You could also check out a website editor like StackEdit or a desktop app like Gitbook Editor. Those are some of the top editors I've come across.
I can't give any advice on a CV guide, but here are a couple of sites that I've found useful for Reddit formatting
formatting guide site: https://www.reddit.com/wiki/commenting
handy (preview) site to check formatting: https://stackedit.io/editor
I also really like Byword. I've found StackEdit to be a good webapp that syncs with Drive. I also just saw in a quick search this: http://dillinger.io/ it looks very much like StackEdit, not sure if it's new.
I'm a big fan of very minimal clean interface to just write with.
https://stackedit.io/editor works nice and support erl code highlighting. See it supports Blogger exporting, but don't know how well it works.
Also don't let the "hello" example page scare you. Open a new Document from the right top tap and start with basic markdown. especially ```erl... you code example here!
Let me know when part 3 is out.
Two points:
Solidity was originally meant to have formal verification tools; these might help with this kind of problem.
I think feature demonstration testing - the inclusion of unit tests that provide walkthroughs and demonstration of contract functionality - will be another tool in the fight against malicious contract authors.
Ultimately, we can only make it arbitrarily difficult for people to publish malicious contracts that masquerade successfully as honourable code. We can't fundamentally prevent a piece of code that benefits one actor over another from being published, and the crypto-anarchist in me makes me want to say "nor should we try".
I mentioned this specifically in the survey -- I wish the editor could switch between rich text and plain text mode, and we could enter in Markdown (MultiMarkdown is even better) and then switch back to see the formatted result. Or better yet do it side-by-side like Marxico or StackEdit.
I also crave the ability to typeset mathematical notation (with MathJax) and put in formatted code snippets.
Not my work - this is a crosspost.
Edit: Looks like the host didn't like the traffic. Here's a mirror: https://stackedit.io/viewer#!provider=gist&gistId=b9a1852a0a17e334f041&filename=wfre
Not my work - this is a crosspost.
Edit: Looks like the host didn't like the traffic. Here's a mirror: https://stackedit.io/viewer#!provider=gist&gistId=b9a1852a0a17e334f041&filename=wfre
Easily! I use StackEdit in my Chrome. Only caveat is that you need to ensure that you push the articles somewhere because in my experience, it periodically shits itself and loses its documents. It does have some neat fetures like inline UML and TEX support.
MarkDown was actually defined by a blogger who uses it for his website
If you want to convert between MarkDown and other formats, you can use PanDoc. It's not perfect, so don't throw 300-page docs through it.
As do I. LaTeX is pretty east to pick up, or if you feel like doing something similar to LaTeX but don't feel like editing all the line spacing you can use the site StackEdit which works pretty well aside from the fact that it can get slightly laggy.
For anvanced forumula I have downsized to https://stackedit.io/ Easy to write (easier then html without losing anything) notes and papers on the the fly without intense dedication to latex or advanced layout rendering packages.