Showing posts sorted by relevance for query stickies. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query stickies. Sort by date Show all posts

Monday, 25 November 2019

Plain Text Stickies

How often do you want to retain the styles when you copy text from one place to another? Almost never? Me neither. It frustrates me that the simple copy and paste, which has been with us for a very long time, includes styles by default*.

But that's not why we're here, This new app isn't some kind of clipboard manager or system extension that gives you system-wide plain text pasting.

I keep a lot of notes. My memory was never good and it's worse now that I'm old. Stickies is still with us and has seemingly always been in Mac OS (actually since system 7 - that's 1991's OS 7, not OSX 10.7) and I have always loved it. It's almost perfect. You can have as many as you like showing, choose different colours for different topics and they just show up as they were when you quit and restart the system. There's no need to get bogged down in saving them as files, just keep them open as long as you need them and then close them when done.

The newer Notes syncs your notes across Apple devices but doesn't allow you to scatter various-coloured notes across your desktop.

This is *NOT* how I like
my notes to end up looking
In both of these cases, and with the myriad third-party 'sticky note' apps**, rich text is the default and there is no option for a note to be plain text. Some even let you choose the type of note (list, rtf, image, etc) but without 'plain text' as an option.

It doesn't have to mean that your notes are all in a boring default monospace or sans-serif font. You can choose a font, font size and font colour for each note, while the text itself remains plain-text.

The closest match I've found for my strange plain-text craving is good old TextEdit, which allows you to set a document to be plain text (and even set the default for new documents to be plain text). For some time I have kept a number of these plain-text TextEdit documents open, resized and positioned where I like. If only it would allow you to set the background colour differently for each window (it does) and then remember that background-colour setting when you quit and re-start TextEdit (it doesn't)  then that would almost do.

Am I alone in this strange obsession?

Time will tell.

The new app is available as a free download. See here.

Update 12 Dec 2019: A newer version which adds some features including optional iCloud syncing (keeps notes in sync across Macs) is in beta and also available for free download.



*You have to take further actions to get rid of that styling, such as  using 'paste as plain text'. To make matters worse, a 'paste as plain text' isn't a standard OS feature and may have a different keyboard shortcut depending on the app you're pasting into and there may not even be a shortcut for it or a 'paste as plain text' at all.

** Forgive me if you have written a third-party app which does do sticky notes with plain text by default. I didn't find it, or if I did, there were other reasons why I didn't continue using it.

Thursday, 14 September 2017

High Sierra keeps Stickies!


They've been there since system 7 (That's OS7, not OSX 10.7). More than 20 years ago. I guess it's had some updates, but it looks pretty much the same.




Saturday, 19 May 2018

Review - Notebook for Mac from Zoho


One person's pro is another's con. I've seen Notebook lose stars because it doesn't allow you to set the colour of text. But I've long been looking for a sticky note alternative that *doesn't* do rich text, ie allows me to copy / paste in and out as plain text. The very long-standing Stickies app is unbelievably still here in High Sierra, unchanged for decades. But those have long worked using rich text.

(OK I can usually cmd-alt-shift-V for paste as plain text, but that doesn't work everywhere.)

Initially it appeared that Notebook's text cards are plain text, but after some use I found that they're not plain-text - but not rich-text either. More of that later.


Learning curve

There's some nomenclature and a few concepts to learn, as with any app. The thing I think of as a sticky note is a 'text card' and collections of various types of note are called 'Notebooks'. Nothing too taxing there. When you start up there is a quick tour (later accessible from the Help menu - "Onboarding" - what horrible business-speak!) but frankly I find that kind of thing annoying. A little like peas; I know they're good for me but I want to go straight for the meat. There's a bit of emphasis on gestures, which a. don't seem to work with my magic mouse, and b. is a swipe or a pinch-out really easier than a double-click? I found myself single-clicking things and expecting them to open, which they don't and I don't see why they couldn't. All-in-all, up and running in moments with minimal hold-ups and bafflement. 9.5/10

Look and feel

This is the top-billed selling point - "the most beautiful note-taking app across devices". It certainly looks polished, if very white. It has a non-standard 'modern web app' feel to it, with lots of sliding and whitespace. Non-standard in MacOS terms, that is. I guess the white background and weird white title bar (lacking a standard customisable toolbar) is for consistency with the iOS version of the app (losing a star here). If the text cards themselves don't behave exactly like sticky notes, they are very analogous. They have a random coloured background and have a sticky-note coloured-square look before you open them up. Notebooks (collections of cards) have customisable covers. These visual cues are very important as your brain gets older and less agile!   9/10

What does it offer over and above the tools that come with the OS?

Bizarrely I can almost create the look and functionality that I want using TextEdit - it allows me to create square plain text documents and set the background colour of each. Unfortunately it doesn't remember those background colours after quit and restart.

MacOS's Notes app scores highly for its syncing across devices (with some frequent annoying duplication). It's the app I have been using when I need to paste something or note down a thought when my phone is in my hand, and later retrieve on the computer. It allows you to organise things in a pretty basic way.

Reminders is as per Notes but for lists. Slightly annoying having to open both those system apps to have text and lists at my fingertips.

Notebook combines text / lists / images / voice and file attachments (why only certain file types?) It has good visual cues (custom covers on the notebooks and coloured background to the text cards).

It still doesn't give me plain text paste in/out, so a full mark lost here, because it's something I'm specifically looking for. But it's not rich text either.... It carries text size and weight, but not colour. It doesn't carry pasted-in font; each note does have its own font which is carried when copying and pasting out. If Zoho are reading, I'd LOVE the option for the text cards to look and work exactly as they do, but to have only plain text copied to the clipboard whenever I copy from a text card. 8/10

Notebook does the syncying across devices, but only by creating an account with Zoho. iCloud-enabling would make a 9/10 into full marks for this part.

Main third-party competion

Without a doubt Evernote. This is made clear by the File > Import from Evernote option. Personally I didn't get past EN's start screen because it didn't seem to want to let me continue without creating an account.

Unexpected neat features

Notebook's 'quicknotes' feature is neat, allowing a quick paste of something from the status bar.  The ability to combine what I've been doing in Notes and in Reminders within one app. The ability to take voice memos and paste in pictures (as a separate card, not just because the cards are rich text - an important distinction). 10/10

Cost / if free - how are you paying?

This is the most remarkable thing about Notebook. The website clearly says that the app is free, subsidised by their business apps. They don't sell your data, there are no ads, there is no premium version, there are no crippled features. If there are any hidden costs, I haven't found them. Solid 10/10  here


In conclusion

Not quite meeting my 'plain text pasting out' requirements, and syncing probably good if you're willing to create an account with the makers. Combining functionality that I've been using various other apps for, and with neat fast access via the status bar. Thanks to Zoho for an incredibly functional and incredibly free app.  It all adds up to:

9.25/10