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Taskpaper editors
Taskpaper editors












taskpaper editors taskpaper editors

These workflows enable Editorial to read/write and work with. I’ve been using several contributed TaskPaper workflows with Editorial for quite a while. Editorial has deserved a powerful desktop companion for a couple of years, and FoldingText is perhaps the nearest thing to a directly comparable app. I’m kicking myself for not finding these things out earlier! Now I have a nice, folding text editor combination on multiple platforms that’s aesthetically pleasing (sorry, but I simply can’t get on with these horrible text editors preferred by programmers with their DOS-era looks, ghastly colours and numbered lines - there, I’ve said it!), that supports focusing and tagging, and can sync very rapidly over Dropbox. 1Writer on iOS, Outlinely on MacOS), but they do implement it. They don’t implement it quite as well as other apps (e.g. And both of them understand GitHub task list syntax, which is extremely useful. Above all, both of them allow you to fold sections of text under headers, which is such a useful feature. It is, in short, a great way to keep Workflowy-style lists for task management.īut there’s still no sign of an Outlinely for iOS, and Robin still hasn’t unveiled his plans for OutlineEdit for iOS, so I started casting around in some frustration for another solution.Īnd found it in a slightly unexpected quarter: FoldingText, from the somewhat eccentric developer of TaskPaper, combined with the extremely powerful Editorial on iOS.īoth of them can access Dropbox, and both of them understand the same hybrid syntax (not entirely consistently, but that’s okay – highlights and comments work, for example). I like the desktop version of Outlinely very much it’s very quick to use, quite flexible, and it’s easy to move items from one part of the outline to another. I’ve been pining for an iOS version of Outlinely for a while now.














Taskpaper editors