Hello! I’m still not satisfied with my note taking app. I tried dozen of them, read tons of lists on random blogs on the internet, without any success. I’ll try to ask you then.
I’m looking for a note taking app with just this 3 features:
- richtext/WYSIWYG (i don’t want to write plain text and then press a button to see it rendered)
- it has to support CHECKBOXES! Most of the apps I tried does not support them, or supported them only if all the note was a checklist. I don’t want a checklist, I want a note where I can put some checkbox inside!
- FOSS and active
The one I’m currently using is obsidian, but it’s not FOSS and it feels very overcomplicated for a simple note apps.
Any suggestion is welcome!
EDIT: forgot to mention, I’m talking about Android XD
Logseq. I love it so much I bought the sync-access to support the project!
Why has the fdroid version the “tracks or refers on your activities” warning?
Logseq is very very similar to obsidian but is FOSS.
Supports checkboxes
I downloaded the fdroid app but… I’m not able to use checkboxes. If I type
- something
it is not converted into a bullet list
- [ ] something [ ] something [] something
are not converted to checklists
and if I click on the checklist icon in the toolbarLATER
appears instead of a checkbox… am I missing something?In the block, the first word should be
TODO
Then when you click off it, it adds a checkbox at the startEverything is already a bullet list, that’s the logseq design, so if you also want numbering then use the command key
/
and search for numberingHope that helps!
It’s not WYSIWYG, though, it uses markdown (like Lemmy/Reddit). I prefer markdown since I don’t want to fiddle with UI buttons while typing, but it’s not what OP is asking for.
OP, why do you want WYSIWYG (on mobile)? I could see it, maybe, on desktop, but a note taking app should be focused on efficient input, imho, so markdown just makes more sense to me. Triple-# for an h3 is way faster than navigating to a Style menu and clicking Heading 3 in a UI dropdown (or whatever).
Regardless, I like Logseq so much that it’s the first open source project I regularly contribute to financially. It’s a game changer for me and managing my ADHD across 6 devices. (Lots of different work and personal machines/devices).
I would argue that it is as close as you can get to WYSIWYG without being it. Logseq works with blocks, which in most cases are only a line or two long. Every block on the page, except the one you’re actively clicked on /working on are WYSIWYG.
There’s no rendering etc, you just click off the block and you see it
Have you already tried Zettel Notes? It is FOSS, active and has everything you mentioned.
I just downloaded it, the UI is pretty neat, but it is not actually richtext, just plaintext with the “view” button to view the formatted output (readonly). Is there a setting I missed to change this behavior?
thanks for the suggestion!
I missed the point about richtext. sorry. Unfortunately, I’m not aware of such a setting.
Notesnook is quite nice, though it has like cloud sync. May put you off a bit if you don’t want that. But the android app is quite nice regardless
Have you tried/looked into Joplin yet? If I understand right, I think the one box it doesn’t tick unfortunately is the first (at least in the Android app), as it supports markdown which is only rendered after leaving edit mode.
However, it does have checkboxes and the whole note doesn’t have to be a checklist. You can write a description, add your checklist, add a horizontal separator line, another description, another checklist, all in the same note. It’s also FOSS and actively updated. Bonus as well is that it can be used with Syncthing to sync notes to your other devices, and there’s a desktop version which has some more flexibility over the Android app.
If you happen to have a Nextcloud instance, there is a decently robust Notes app that can be used from either the web browser or from a standalone app on Android (available on f-droid and Google Play).
After much fighting with and trying of other solution, that’s what I ended up settling with.
I sound like a broken record but check also https://silverbullet.md
It should check all of your boxes + it has local files like obsidian (which is why I love it), and the main dev is very active both on discord and forum.
It’s not open source yet, but that is on their roadmap. Acreom behaves in a similar way to Obsidian in that it’s text files on the local file system. But it actually handles check boxes much better than Obsidian.
That said, the Android app requires use of their cloud sync, which I’m not a fan of because like you I’d rather manage my own sync. I’ve encouraged the dev to consider it on Android but I seem to be the only one bringing it up at all.
seems interesting, but I can’t find the “checkbox” feature in the list :(
Just use Simplenote.
I just downloaded it and it won’t make me use the app without an account… This is not a good start
It’s a fairly normal start, and “must not force you to use an account” wasn’t listed in your set of requirements. The account is because the app supports completely free syncing across multiple mobile and desktop platforms. Just use any throwaway google account or create a new one just for the purpose. No subscription and it is FOSS.
Looks cool, but does not appear to be FOSS, please correct me if I’m wrong.
I have no idea. I wanted a standalone alternative to Google Keep on one of my lesser used devices and this did the job.
Bought the license and it does what I need, plus it synchs to my encrypted storage on pCloud.
I know someone else already mentioned it but I’m going to do the same. Notesnook. I have been using it for around six months now.
I have been looking for the perfect note taking up for a long time. I have some of the same concern as you and Standard Notes looked like a promising app for me but it also looked really overpriced and kind of over complicated.
Notesnook pretty much had everything I wanted. The most important thing for me is that it is completely cross-platform. It has perfect feature parity no matter where you are, no matter if you’re on the web app, the iOS app or the Android app, the Mac app, whatever. It has everything on all apps.
It’s important to me because some apps are primarily developed for one platform and you can tell that while you pay the same price on another, you’re still a second class citizen. And you also get some apps which are in general scattered around feature-wise. So some client gets some features and other don’t. It’s weird. I mean look at the whole Proton suite between iOS and Android.
It can sync with its own service, it works well enough, and it’s end to an encrypted which I love.
And it’s fully open source! Which is the cherry on top.
My only gripe with it is its editor. It supports markdown but it’s not really markdown. It’s a rich text editor with markdown support for formatting which is very different. The results are sensibly the same but more often than not if you copy and paste something that is already formatted from a markdown editor into the app, it won’t format it. You will get # and * everywhere but they won’t do what they’re meant to be doing. Because it’s made to interpret Markdown as you type it.
I wish we could get an actual simple, rock solid Markdown editor. But other than that? Notesnook is the nest Note taking app I’ve used and I’ve tried plenty.
Thanks for the detailed answer! I downloaded it and the UI is very nice, but sadly the notes seem to be stored in an internal db, so I can only see them using the app itself. I’d rather an app that saves the files as plain text, so that I can sync them however I want and open them with whatever app I want
It’s however the best one I tried so far, so I’ll probably settle with this! thanks for the suggestion!