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Does anyone have a good suggestion for a markdown editor?

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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 14:52

My main requirement is that I am using Syncthing to sync my notes from my Android phone, which uses Quillpad. Quillpad is amazing and looks super nice, and functional too, but all the notes are in one big folder rather than being subdivided by notebook. So I require a markdown editor that can create “notebooks” but don’t change the folder structure of the notes (I tested putting notes in subfolders, and quillpad thought the notes were deleted. Silly Quillpad!)

So the notebooks/similar organisation of notes needs to be specific to the app and should not change the folder structure. I would prefer if the app is open-source too, and something that fits with my desktop (KDE Plasma) would be cool too :D

This rules out Obsidian (which puts notes in a folder structure. Obsidian is great, but won’t sync well with Quillpad), Joplin won’t work either.

I am using EndeavourOS with KDE Plasma

https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418
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https://lemmy.zip/u/pinball_wizard posted on Feb 18, 2026 14:56
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

You have very specific requirements. You may attract the Vim and Emacs fans…

Joking aside, I have very specific requirements, and I just use Vim on desktop.

https://lemmy.zip/comment/24724961
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:01
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Alternatively, you could suggest an Android markdown editor that does create a folder structure (and hence can be used with Obsidian or similar)

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964138
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https://programming.dev/u/Lembot_0006 posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:09
In reply to: https://lemmy.zip/comment/24724961

OP asks for markdown editor, not for beeper and text spoiler

https://programming.dev/comment/22256872
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:11
In reply to: https://lemmy.zip/comment/24724961

I don’t think Vim has a way to show all my notes in one place, or any way to organise notes? (unless it does, you never know)

Also, Vim-based editors have steep learning curves. It would be cool to learn how to use it, but I want to explore other options before I fall into the rabbit hole

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964309
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:13
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964309

Does Vim have any live markdown preview or plugins that enable that? If it does that would be quite interesting

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964328
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https://lemmy.zip/u/pinball_wizard posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:17
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964309

I don’t think Vim has a way to show all my notes in one place, or any way to organise notes? (unless it does, you never know)

Many use the “Nerd Tree” plugin for this, but there’s…too many options.

I want to explore other options before I fall into the rabbit hole

I respect that. The rabbit hole goes very deep. In your shoes, I might still take a look at an editor with a strong plugin ecosystem, like Emacs or VSCodium. Is Atom still around? Atom was nice.

https://lemmy.zip/comment/24725375
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https://lemmy.zip/u/pinball_wizard posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:19
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22256872

LoL.

I’m just sharing what I use. I can’t help that I was indoctrinated so young into the cult of Vim.

https://lemmy.zip/comment/24725424
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https://lemmy.ml/u/thingsiplay posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:20
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

The thing is, Markdown is just regular text. So there is no real need for a dedicated editor. In example I edit and write Markdown files with Vim. Maybe you can install a plugin to help a little bit, but there is no need for.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24036984
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https://piefed.ca/u/Subscript5676 posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:23
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Not sure if I understood what you mean by “notebook”, cause if you want your notes to subdivide, then isn’t that what a folder can do?

https://piefed.ca/comment/3548783
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https://infosec.pub/u/boatswain posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:27
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Can you clarify what you mean about the folder structure? As far as I know, Obsidian doesn’t change up the directory structure at all; it just uses what’s already there: if you’ve got folders, you’ll see them in Obsidian. If you don’t, all the notes will be in one big directory.

https://infosec.pub/comment/20453721
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https://feddit.it/u/Axolotl_cpp posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:33
In reply to: https://lemmy.ml/comment/24036984

Because you’d want to see the result of markdown otherwise it’s just useless and you can use plain text

https://feddit.it/comment/18380481
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https://programming.dev/u/tyler posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:33
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

You could try out symlinks and then just use a normal editor like obsidian. Like put all the files in the root, but symlink them into folders to make it easy to organize?

https://programming.dev/comment/22257354
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https://lemmy.ml/u/thingsiplay posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:36
In reply to: https://feddit.it/comment/18380481

I don’t need to see the results immediately to know what the markdown does.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24037368
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https://lemmy.ml/u/tastemyglaive posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:40
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Joplin is nice, has enough features to justify using it alongside Orgzly Revived. Also, Markor is helpful in certain cases.

Not Markdown but also try Saber, which is a little scribble pad. Rounds everything out.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24037473
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:41
In reply to: https://piefed.ca/comment/3548783

Like, organising notes into groups. Quillpad doesn’t seem to like folders, so I need an app that organises notes without folders

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964974
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https://feddit.org/u/nocteb posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:42
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

i would use (vs)code or pycharm

https://feddit.org/comment/11591869
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:43
In reply to: https://infosec.pub/comment/20453721

But to organise notes, you need folders. I’m looking for an app that lets you organise notes in a way that doesn’t use folders. (so still able to group notes together and being able to separate them, but not with folders since Quillpad doesn’t like folders)

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965019
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:45
In reply to: https://lemmy.ml/comment/24037473

I previously used Joplin, but I like the UI of Quillpad more, and I also like that it saves notes as proper files than can be synced with Syncthing rather than requiring something like Nextcloud. Markor seems cool but I prefer the UI of Quillpad.

I do use Saber to make quick little diagrams and such.

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965091
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https://social.ozymandias.club/u/ramasses posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:45
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

I use helix editor for my markdown editor. Its use case is for the people that have no interest in configuring vim/neovim plugins. I would totally recommend it. Otherwise, you could use the kde editor Kate, or if you are a masochist nano.
helix-editor.com

https://social.ozymandias.club/comment/141412
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https://lemmy.ml/u/thingsiplay posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:48
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964328

https://github.com/iamcco/markdown-preview.nvim

There is one in Neovim that might interest you. It opens up the current file content you edit in a new web browser, Firefox in example. The cool thing is, it is also synchronizing the current position of the document in Neovim and the browser view. I don’t need that functionality, but found it very cool.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24037686
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https://lemmy.zip/u/pinball_wizard posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:51
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964328

Does Vim have any live markdown preview or plugins that enable that?

Yes. I recognize some of the ones mentioned in this article as ones I have appreciated, in the past.

https://www.w3tutorials.net/blog/is-there-a-vim-plugin-for-previewing-markdown-files/

If it does that would be quite interesting

Oh yeah!

I’m not actually trying to get you to switch, but your post reads to me as someone ready to bring in some serious tooling to get achieve a precise workflow.

Vim still might be a bit extreme, haha.

But it does sound to me like your needs call for an editor with a strong open plugin ecosystem.

I understand that Emacs and VSCodium also have excellent Markdown plugins.

https://lemmy.zip/comment/24726229
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 15:52
In reply to: https://piefed.ca/comment/3548783

I have edited the lost to clarify my requirements!

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965234
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https://piefed.social/u/FishFace posted on Feb 18, 2026 16:05
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

What you’re looking for is not a markdown editor but a notes organiser that uses markdown. Any text editor makes a decent markdown editor, because that’s the point.

https://piefed.social/comment/10188854
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 18, 2026 16:07
In reply to: https://piefed.social/comment/10188854

OK, no problem. Post has been edited

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965594
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https://lemmy.ml/u/thingsiplay posted on Feb 18, 2026 16:12
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22256872

Any editor can edit markdown. Whats your point? Vim is a good option and nothing wrong with bringing it up or recommending it.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24038264
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https://piefed.social/u/FishFace posted on Feb 18, 2026 16:24
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965594

Nice! Hope you get some help. I am also interested in a notes organiser but don’t have the folder-structure constraint.

https://piefed.social/comment/10189179
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https://lemmy.ml/u/Ephera posted on Feb 18, 2026 16:39
In reply to: https://feddit.org/comment/11591869

Well, Kate would be the obvious choice for KDE…

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24038834
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https://programming.dev/u/Lembot_0006 posted on Feb 18, 2026 16:53
In reply to: https://lemmy.ml/comment/24038264

Vim is a good option

It isn’t. And it stopped being one 30-40 years ago. All it “goodness” holding on the fanaticism of those who spend too much time mastering this “editor” and inventing excuses to call it “good”. It the most counterintuitive interface ever.

And no, I won’t stop pointing that. I wasted a few years of my life on this shit while being younger and trustier. I listened to advise of people who I hoped were more experienced and know better. Alas they were crazy fanatics.

https://programming.dev/comment/22259081
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https://lemmy.ml/u/Liketearsinrain posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:14
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22259081

It’s so arrogant to make universal statements like this. Not everyone finds the same interfaces work for them.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24039502
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https://lemmy.ml/u/Liketearsinrain posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:15
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

I like Joplin, but I don’t think it matters much which one you pick, only that you end up using it.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24039519
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https://lemmy.cafe/u/Onomatopoeia posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:24
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Just curious (genuinely not criticising your app choice) - I’ve tried Quillpad and it doesn’t seem much different from Joplin on Android to me.

What is it you find it does better than Joplin for you?

(I’m always testing notebook apps as I’m trying to get away from OneNote.)

https://lemmy.cafe/comment/15983636
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https://thelemmy.club/u/Morphite88 posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:24
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965019

What about tags?

https://thelemmy.club/comment/24818105
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https://piefed.ca/u/Subscript5676 posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:28
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964974

So it sounds like you want to keep using Quillpad, and so you’re stuck with the folder structure, which is no subfolders, that Quillpad implicitly requires.

It kinda sounds like you need some way to “tag” your notes so that whatever application you’re using would pick those up and be able to give you all notes with a particular “tag” in a view.

If that’s the case, Obsidian can do that. You can keep the current folder structure (of just being a flat folder), and add tags to your notes (e.g. #my_tag). Then, instead of using the default file viewer, you’d look at files via tags. The only problem, though, is I’m not sure if there’s a particular view that can do that.

And no, Vim wouldn’t do what you want either, at least OOTB, cause it’s just an editor and not a file organizer or indexer. Pretty sure that applies to Emacs as well. You’d need some plugin that would do that, and I don’t think I’ve heard of one that would do this.

https://piefed.ca/comment/3550789
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https://lemmy.ml/u/Ephera posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:35
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Yet more suggestions which you didn’t ask for:

1) GitNote might be up your alley. Its UI is not as slick as QuillPad, nor does it have as many features, but it does faithfully keep the folder structure.
Somewhat of a deal-breaker for me personally: It can’t do reminders.

2) Embrace the chaos. 😅 I have a little program for managing my notes on desktop and it just dumps them all in one folder, too. If I need to find something again, I’ve got a little text search, which is basically the equivalent of grep -iR. I just make sure to mention enough keywords in each note, so that I can find it again.
Personally, I much prefer this workflow, because you can start typing (and hitting Ctrl+S) and then later ensure that it has all the right metadata, rather than having to select a folder upfront where it will be saved.

I actually tried QuillPad not too long ago and couldn’t make it work for me, but being able to save as normal files seems to be a recent addition, so maybe that’s what I was missing.
I’ll probably try setting it up to work with my desktop note system then…

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24039888
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https://lemmy.ml/u/thingsiplay posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:37
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22259081

You are entitled to your opinion, I grant you that. But you are not entitled to say what others think is good or bad.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24039940
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https://lemmy.world/u/oOAlteredBeastOo posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:38
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Logseq might be a good option for you. You create “projects” for a topic. Markdown notes for that “project” are separated into “pages” and “journals.” For example, if you created a project called “cider_making”, you could create the following Markdown page files and save them in the pages directory: “Fuji Apple.md”, “cider press.md”, and “pectic enzyme.md.” If prefer to track notes in a journal format, your Markdown file would use the following format and be saved in the journal directory: “2026-02-19.md.”

Logseq is not cloud based. All files are stored local the machine you installed the software on. There are options to use a code repository to sync to other devices, but Syncthing can also be used to sync your notes. I’m using rsync to send notes I write on my laptop to my phone, living room computer, and file server. If I’m on a trusted computer on my network, I can use SSH X11forwarding to open the Logseq UI remotely to create new notes. Otherwise I can create a new page or journal Markdown file via SSH and vi. I’d just need to save the Markdown file in the appropriate project’s journal or page directory to keep things organized. You can also host a webUI to update your notes if you are so inclined.

https:docs.logseq.com/#page/contents

Best of luck!

https://lemmy.world/comment/22213106
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https://programming.dev/u/Lembot_0006 posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:43
In reply to: https://lemmy.ml/comment/24039502

Sometimes things are simple. You just see an ugly thing and say “it is ugly”.
You can apply some mental gymnastics, some philosophical voodoo, some psychological tricks, etc to make shit look like something nice. Moreover, you might even find a few people who sincerely like the shit. But shit is shit.
And there is no any reason, except for spreading the fanatical craziness, to suggest shit to people who want a real tool to solve real problems. No, a few coprophiles don’t make shit an appropriate suggestion to people who just asked for some video.

That’s not “arrogance”. That’s defense of new people. Now they at least won’t unconditionally trust whatever you say. Now they will see that the are other opinions on the matter. And rather strong opinions. Strong opinions don’t appear without reason. It worth investigating. Investigation leads to comparison of other options. Vimer lose. Common sense win.

https://programming.dev/comment/22259948
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https://piefed.blahaj.zone/u/rehydrate posted on Feb 18, 2026 17:59
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

What do we think about LogSeq? Its basically obsidian but without folders, instead we have name spaces. But it has a bit of a learning curve which may make it at first confusing to use.

https://piefed.blahaj.zone/comment/3403223
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https://piefed.blahaj.zone/u/calliope posted on Feb 18, 2026 18:41
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Have you tried tagspaces? It’s not primarily an editor (from what I can tell) but if you want to split file editing from grouping/tagging, it might be worth a shot.

I haven’t tried it but I will, because I really like ways to organize files that don’t require actually changing the files themselves!

https://piefed.blahaj.zone/comment/3403780
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https://lemmy.ml/u/thingsiplay posted on Feb 18, 2026 18:43
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22259948

If I listened to you, then I would never try Vim and never understood how wonderful it is. Before that, i thought Vim is ugly and dumb. Why would anyone use Vim? Someday I had enough of the bullshit with the GUI tools and tried out this mystical Vim… and fall in love. Whenever I use a non Vim editor, it feels lacking, it feels holding me back. Or more specifically, I like to think how a Vim user thinks with combining the keys (wcw to replace next word in example).

Lot of people like using Vim. Just because you didn’t like it does not mean we should stop recommending or bringing it up. Let people try and find their own opinion, do not force your opinion on others.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24041135
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https://programming.dev/u/Lembot_0006 posted on Feb 18, 2026 18:49
In reply to: https://lemmy.ml/comment/24041135

As long as people like you would recommend vim, people like me would warn people to not trust fanatics.

https://programming.dev/comment/22261033
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https://lemmy.ml/u/thingsiplay posted on Feb 18, 2026 18:51
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22261033

Just because I do not share your opinion does not make me a fanatic. I think you are one of those I need to block, that is nonsense you are spreading.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24041285
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https://programming.dev/u/Lembot_0006 posted on Feb 18, 2026 19:22
In reply to: https://lemmy.ml/comment/24041285

I spread nothing. I PREVENT YOU from spreading your “nonsense.”

https://programming.dev/comment/22261566
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https://piefed.social/u/priapus posted on Feb 18, 2026 20:23
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965019

It sounds like you could use any markdown app that supports tags and links, which includes Obsidian. A lot of Obsidian users do not use folders for organization at all, theyre just one organization option of many. You could also look at Logseq which has similar features.

https://piefed.social/comment/10192501
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https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/u/mathemachristian posted on Feb 18, 2026 21:27
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Orgmode!!

https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19257805
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https://programming.dev/u/costalfy posted on Feb 18, 2026 21:52
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

I use https://silverbullet.md/ since a year after migrating from logseq.

https://programming.dev/comment/22264320
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https://infosec.pub/u/boatswain posted on Feb 18, 2026 21:57
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21965019

Just use Obsidian without using folders, then? They’re completely optional.

https://infosec.pub/comment/20460117
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https://programming.dev/u/MadhuGururajan posted on Feb 19, 2026 02:15
In reply to: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19257805

any quick way to learn emacs syntax for a long time vim user? I understand if you suggest evil mode but lets assume i actually want to learn the emacs motions.

I can go through the emacs manual but that is more of a longer term engagement.

https://programming.dev/comment/22267803
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https://lemmy.zip/u/gole posted on Feb 19, 2026 03:11
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

You can put all your notes in a single folder with Obsidian. Use a note to link to other notes, the first note will act as your “notebook”

https://lemmy.zip/comment/24738575
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 19, 2026 03:25
In reply to: https://lemmy.cafe/comment/15983636

Joplin is awesome, super customisable, has many plugins to extend functionality, etc., but the main downside is that markdown files aren’t saved as files that can be easily synced with something like Syncthing. Also, Quillpad has a slick UI that matches my theme, which is a nice bonus :0

One thing I will say, Quillpad isn’t as customisable as Joplin (the toolbar of different functions can’t be modified, for example) but it works for me and I like using it

I also like that you can view many notes at a glance (including some of the description) whereas Joplin only let you see the titles of the notes at a glance I think

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21976298
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https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 19, 2026 03:27
In reply to: https://piefed.ca/comment/3550789

Perhaps that will work. I will try that out!

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21976328
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https://lemmy.world/u/nieminen posted on Feb 19, 2026 03:36
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Others have said, but I’m a big fan of obsidian. I use syncthing to keep my vaults current across my phone and computers.

It looks good, has a plugin for just about anything you’d need, and works really well on every system I’ve tried. Ios, macos, Linux, windows, and android.

https://lemmy.world/comment/22221730
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https://midwest.social/u/cymor posted on Feb 19, 2026 03:51
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Logseq. I had been using my own markdown-git process, and with some small tweaks, it indexed 5 years of daily notes. Lots of plugins and features.

https://midwest.social/comment/22780114
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https://midwest.social/u/cymor posted on Feb 19, 2026 03:53
In reply to: https://piefed.blahaj.zone/comment/3403223

I love it. My previous process was pretty much the same (markdown-git), so it works great for me.

https://midwest.social/comment/22780154
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https://programming.dev/u/somegeek posted on Feb 19, 2026 06:50
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22264320

Can silverbullet be used as a team knowledge base? Online collaboration and such?

https://programming.dev/comment/22270601
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https://programming.dev/u/chasteinsect posted on Feb 19, 2026 08:27
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21964309

I switched from Obsidian to Neovim mainly because of Vim-motions and keybindings. Obsidian has Vim-motion support but it’s pretty basic and some stuff doesn’t work… it’s just not the same.

I have a pretty minimal Neovim setup and don’t use any special plugins for markdown. I just use Treesitter to create some custom highlight groups to highlight links, codeblocks, headlines and similar stuff. I don’t do images or complex tables or all of that other jazz and I know markdown by heart for the most part so I don’t really need any markdown preview plugins. But there are plugins that render markdown in the Neovim buffer itself, instead of having you go to your browser to see your changes.

It’s way simpler. I use gO to see the outline of my file, also mini.pick which is just a grep and fuzzy finder to find specific lines, words, files and navigate between them. I have been using Neovim for over a year so and use it basically everywhere so the benefits keep compounding as I learn how to navigate where I want faster. It’s a powerful tool. One thing I will say is because you use Neovim you don’t need to really organize your notes as you just use your picker to find stuff for you and it’s sooooo much faster and better than whatever Obsidian had. You never have to go to your file tree or whatever and search for that file.

This wasn’t a switch that I did fanatically. I went back to Obsidian a few times for a couple of days / weeks and just used that. It’s fine … It works… But afterwards every time I just went back to Neovim, did some modifications to my config, and started using it more and more until it just became way better.

All of that being said … would I recommend someone start Neovim just to write markdown? No. As you said it has a pretty steep learning curve and you will never get back the time you spent on it, it’s also a bit overkill to use it just for markdown, you will need to make some modifications as well… But I find it more fun and enjoyable to work with.

https://programming.dev/comment/22271708
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https://lemmy.ml/u/glitching posted on Feb 19, 2026 09:11
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

the one with the stupidest name - qownnotes, it’s QT, so it isn’t an electron slob and ntegrates nicely into plasma. when you turn off all the cacophony of the zillion toolbars and stuff, it yields a distraction-free UI ala apple’s notes. I use it with subfolders but it’s got tags, so you can mimic the same functionality without them.

it’s got buncha stuff in it (its own nextcloud sync, AI summary support, etc.), which thankfull is/can be turned off.

https://lemmy.ml/comment/24053299
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$$597
https://programming.dev/u/KissYagni posted on Feb 19, 2026 09:42
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22270601

It can. Silverbullet can do quite anything, that’s where it’s name comes from. You can code your own logic directly in markdown through lua like code, get pages tags, generates tables etc… but the tool is very “hacky”. Either you love it, either you hate it. And if you are not a hairy nerdy guy, you will hate it.

https://programming.dev/comment/22272492
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$$600
https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 19, 2026 10:13
In reply to: https://lemmy.ml/comment/24053299

Interesting, I might look at that later

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21980614
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$$687
https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/u/mathemachristian posted on Feb 19, 2026 12:25
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22267803

For the basics the tutorial that comes with stock emacs is GOAT. You navigate the tutorial in the program you’re learning the navigation in, that’s how I learned it. It covers the basics, moving, killing/yanking (cutting/pasting), moving the view without moving the point (the cursor), handling buffers (open files), windows (subframes in the emacs window) and frames (multiple emacs windows). There is a bit of a translation required as emacs is old and some terms come from a time before the concepts were in common english but it’s nothing really. I’m rather new to emacs as well, and this is how I learnt it.

After that what I found most useful was the following packages

(require 'use-package)
(require 'diminish)
(require 'bind-key)

(use-package eldoc)

(use-package which-key
  :bind ("M-H" . which-key-show-top-level)
  :init (which-key-mode t)
  :config (which-key-setup-side-window-right-bottom))

(use-package marginalia :init (marginalia-mode))

(use-package embark :bind ("C-<return>" . embark-act)
  :custom (prefix-help-command #'embark-prefix-help-command))

(use-package embark-consult
  :hook (embark-collect-mode consult-preview-at-point-mode))

This binds Alt+H to show all the keys available (use Ctrl+h n to scroll) as well as automatically pops up a buffer when you entered a command that isn’t complete, e.g. Ctrl+x. And it binds Ctrl+Return to a kind of right-click menu that tries to guess at all the actions you could do with the thing you have at under the point.

But most useful, is Ctrl+h f to describe what a function does and Ctrl+h v to describe what a variable does as well as the customize menu Alt+x customize.

For a theme I would suggest one of ef-themes but that’s up to you ofcourse. Org-mode’s export really is awesome though.

Emacs is a bit daunting to set up but I’m really loving it. See also https://github.com/SystemCrafters/crafted-emacs/tree/master for some ideas for how to set up some other stuff, although I went with the stock completions.

There are also non-emacs ways of interacting with org files https://orgmode.org/tools.html but I don’t know anything about them.

https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19266569
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$$691
https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/u/mathemachristian posted on Feb 19, 2026 12:30
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22259081

What specifically is bad about it?

https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19266612
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$$713
https://programming.dev/u/MadhuGururajan posted on Feb 19, 2026 12:53
In reply to: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19266569

yeah thanks for the resources. I decided to just go through the manual.

And yeah, the older terms.. I understand them as I am a crusty millenial and kind of like the charm of it.

my goal is to shift to emacs for work as I am drawn to the efficient notetaking + planner + dev environemnt with org mode.

https://programming.dev/comment/22274761
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$$717
https://programming.dev/u/Lembot_0006 posted on Feb 19, 2026 12:55
In reply to: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19266612

Extremely low profit/effort ratio. Vim demands an enormous (as for a text editor) effort to master it, demands regular usage (it is impossible to keep those voodoo enchantments in the head. Vimers even have cribs with most important commands. Pathetic), and all that for practically nothing.

https://programming.dev/comment/22274792
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$$728
https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/u/mathemachristian posted on Feb 19, 2026 13:10
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22274792

Oh you’re just mad at how much power it puts in the hands of the user. Yeah it has a steep learning curve but these text editors (for reference I use emacs) are more like power tools. There are so many different areas where they get used it’s impossible to build a one-size fits all solution. Do you see how many different sawbenches there are? This is like that.

What if I have to, typeset math, write some auxiliary python code and keep notes? Well I need a text editor that is fundamentally different from someone a kernel hacker.

I’m for sure not gonna switch between Writer and some python IDE and another notes taking app, that’s just the same learning effort spread over different apps.

https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19267100
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$$734
https://programming.dev/u/Lembot_0006 posted on Feb 19, 2026 13:18
In reply to: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19267100

how much power it puts in the hands

Yes, repeat that mantra until you find yourself omnipowered power-vimer of powerful power :)

https://programming.dev/comment/22275136
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$$775
https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/u/mathemachristian posted on Feb 19, 2026 14:36
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22275136

I’m not a vimmer lol, but with reading comprehension like yours I think I can understand where your skill issue comes from blobfox, blobfoxcrylaugh

https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/comment/19268285
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$$876
https://programming.dev/u/netizen posted on Feb 19, 2026 16:14
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

Try KleverNotes

https://programming.dev/comment/22278271
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$$929
https://lemmy.cafe/u/Onomatopoeia posted on Feb 19, 2026 17:14
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21976298

I use Joplin with Syncthing and it works fine, so far?

Is there something about it that’s known to have issues with ST that I just haven’t run into yet?

https://lemmy.cafe/comment/16000124
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$$1031
https://programming.dev/u/somegeek posted on Feb 19, 2026 18:52
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22272492

Well… I am a very hairy nerdy guy. What does the collaboration workflow look like? The end result should be simple because my teammates aren’t hairy nerdy guys :))

https://programming.dev/comment/22281373
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$$1261
https://sopuli.xyz/u/sbeak posted on Feb 20, 2026 03:01
In reply to: https://lemmy.cafe/comment/16000124

Oh, I thought Joplin obfuscated notes? Nice that you are able to use Syncthing. The main draw of Quillpad is probably the UI and how it can fit my phone’s theme (Joplin’s UI is still quite intuitive though)

https://sopuli.xyz/comment/21997087
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$$1460
https://programming.dev/u/KissYagni posted on Feb 20, 2026 09:06
In reply to: https://programming.dev/comment/22281373

In this case, I don’t think silverbullet is the right tool. It’s not like if an “admin” can hide all the complexity for end users by creating its own frontend. The complexity will still be visible to end users. As long as someone can edit a page, he will see the lua script behind.

If readonly, it just look like other wiki. The https://silverbullet.md/ site is itslef written in silverbullet. You can have a look to video to see how it works: https://silverbullet.md/Manual

Out of the box, there is no really “Admin” portal and “User” portal. It may be doable, but I cannot describ a workflow. I use it as a small wiki for my homelab because I like overcomplicated tool. I’m on neovim btw 🤣

https://programming.dev/comment/22293047
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$$1566
https://programming.dev/u/clifmo posted on Feb 20, 2026 13:27
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

https://youtu.be/XRpHIa-2XCE

A 30 minute video about opening up a text box and typing something into it for later, made for people who watch videos about doing that rather than just getting work done.

00:29 Requirements 4:10 Zettlr, VNote, and nb 5:48 Zim 7:50 QOwnNotes 12:31 The end of pretending this is about productivity 14:48 Emacs 21:18 Neovim 25:59 It never ends 27:12 Kakoune, Helix, Vis, Neatvi (I don’t use these)

https://programming.dev/comment/22295929
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$$1571
https://lemmy.ca/u/melsaskca posted on Feb 20, 2026 13:46
In reply to: https://sopuli.xyz/post/41359418

I use paper scribblers and a pen or pencil, plus an index book so I can compile what I am entering, but I’m not in any hurry though. /s

https://lemmy.ca/comment/21806179
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