

markdown utilising customers aren't their target users. Perhaps the only or most important reason is that it's too much work/trouble and not much gain in functionality (as they see it). Some other issues may arise like search engine would have to interpret ENML as well as markdown but this still seems solvable. Only thing that comes to my mind is to define note's format along with each new note. Especially if part of their notes become unreadable due to some conversion incompatibilities/issues. Well, perhaps indeed not and you can't convert all users' notes to markdown as it won't make all people happy. As far as I know, Marxico can't do it either. Maybe I can live without that.īest guess that I have for its absence is that round-tripping markdown ENML is not trivial. Honestly the only feature I can't find elsewhere is the ability to search handwritten text within jpegs. I think I just talked myself out of even bothering with EN anymore. So does their website, which puts all the emphasis on business features. Failure to add Markdown support after years of hemming and hawing sends the message that they don't care about individuals anymore. Sadly, though, it seems they have chosen to do the opposite-focus on team and business features like Spaces. The beauty of Evernote is all of the things it can do, but that's also the problem with Evernote.
#TEXTASTIC REVIEW 2018 PRO#
Now that I think of it, I wish Evernote had reserved all the team collaboration and other businessy features for a special Pro subscription. If you read reviews for them, you'll find a lot of former Evernote users who gave up on EN as a writing/note-taking tool. To be fair, I said "apps like Bear." I know that Bear is a newcomer but there are a lot of apps out there that use Markdown. I doubt that Evernote is looking to "stamp Bear in its tracks". But I don't know it all sounds kind of clunky to me. Maybe they could add some sort of id attribute based system for dealing with semantic styles, including predefined or user-defined styles, since a lot of people want those (I do too). As best I can figure, Markdown and Evernote would be an input-only proposition: once Markdown goes into Evernote, it's converted into some kind of style attribute based markup that may or may not be recognizable as Markdown-specific, so then you're stuck editing in the general Evernote editor anyways (note: I don't know what Marxico does, as I'm not a Marxico users, so the preceding is a little theoretical). Think of web clipping, and all of the crazy formatting out there that can wind up in an Evernote note. This is the general problem for Evernote with respect to Markdown: Evernote can contain and display formatting ( ), at least some of it Markdown cannot express.

For doing a quick update, change etc, you're screwed.

So when moving to a phone, you're screwed. You can't do it, for Marxico to maintain control and understanding of the note, you have to edit within it.
