![]() I use Evernote for everything related to my business - I blog/write in Evernote, I keep track of business receipts, I log all my marketing in Evernote. I run a website, and as a solo-preneur, that means I need to find ways to code myself sometimes. I'd like to posit another direction regarding code block - that not all who use code are programmers! I think the extremely low traction on this thread indicates that not many programmers use Evernote for note taking! If Evernote could just incorporate this one feature(language formatting like ) it may appeal to a much larger audience! In this quote, alone, this indicates how fast the industry moves. Yes, Evernote moved to the cloud this last year, a change that users cannot see upfront but takes time away from dev, but two years is a long time to wait on a feature. I looked into this same feature request nearly two years ago and there is still nothing on it. The other thing I am noticing is that new features seem to be slow to rollout. ![]() What is important to remember is that the platform should not discriminate the use case, but should instead provide the tools and let the users decide how to implement and use case.From what I have read in the few forums I have peaked at today it seems like people suggest the features and "Super Gurus" come in and dissect the request or act as fire control.Ĭonsider my upvote and comment as my form of "super support!" to help promote this feature by providing the developers some context. In my use case, I am not storing code, I am storing commands for various command line interfaces that I need to remember.hence they are notes. I use a code editor (Textastic) for my coding storing the code as a text file which I add as an attachment to a note. ", however I'm thinking Evernote's note editor/format is not the best place to do coding or store code. I agree it's a critical feature for " programmers. It's recognized Evernote's editor doesn't include a code syntax highlighting feature for program/script code hence the above feature request. Why do I get the feeling Evernote is a company of two people in a house somewhere who spend all day checking their monthly income statements. There are posts i've run across in the last 3 top hits on google dating back to 2016, I don't know how it's even possible after 4 years of customers complaining and in 2020 to have a text editor without basic functionality like "in this block of text, please don't change what I type" let alone "please recognize this block of text for what it is and highlight it appropriately". I am now ACTIVELY looking to get off your platform. I notice the box I am CURRENTLY TYING IN did not auto-correct any of the words i've put in, making EVEN IT be SIGNIFICANTLY more useful to the standard/average user of your software THAN YOUR ACTUAL SOFTWARE IS. Every WIKI, IDE, Forums Software and Text Editor in existence has AT MINIMUM this feature functionality. Again the VAST MAJORITY of these text strings have an importance to be stored AS IS, as copied into the program without ANY modification AT ALL.ġ993 we had that capability on web pages. ![]() I'm not sure who you think your audience is? Almost every white collar job these days has it's hand in Big Data, Cloud or Web in some way, meaning the VAST MAJORITY of your customer base has SOME NEED to store SOMETHING that looks like an unformatted text string, likely containing words, phrases or symbols that do not translate into a dictionary word. If I put the word "ansible" into Evernote it should not AUTOMATICALLY change it to "sensible" for me, it should NOT do it AGAIN after I CORRECT it, and it should not take me adding the word to the bloody dictionary before it will finally stop trying to auto-correct it in EVERY LINE. It's about simply storing what I want it to store in the format I asked it to store it in. This isn't about syntax highlighting, or turning Evernote into an IDE. * Replace Quotes with stupid MS Word Style Quotes How the heck hard can it be to create a button to create a code snippit section in Evernote that does not: HTML 1.0, released in 1993 had 42 TOTAL tags supported in the language. I have specifically logged in to this form as a first time poster just to respond to this.
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