• @DPUGT2@lemmy.ml
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    32 years ago

    Does it muck up the html code the way it does md? Last I checked, it stuffed a bunch of metadata into the md which meant it was the only editor that could make use of it… so if you wanted to use the NC interface to edit a note on a machine that you didn’t or couldn’t install Joplin, it screwed things up.

    • @peppermint@lemmy.ml
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      02 years ago

      I don’t fully understand the context of your question. If you use encryption you can only edit files using the app, but it is supported on a variety of platforms including android, Linux and freebsd. In practice - anything where you can use electrons builder (npm run dist). There’s also CLI app.

      • @DPUGT2@lemmy.ml
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        22 years ago

        They’re “markdown” files. You can go into the Nextcloud web app interface, and open them or any other text file.

        And, you’d even be able to modify those files there… except that Joplin doesn’t do true markdown at all. It spams it up with some metadata which it hides within its own interface. Sometimes I want to be able to look at or add to notes when I’m not at a computer that I own, it’d be able to use NC’s web app for that.

        Just wondering if Joplin still screws this up, or if they somehow went in and fixed it.

        • @peppermint@lemmy.ml
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          22 years ago

          Its not a bug, its a feature. Use the app, it 1) allows you to encrypt those files 2) works on a variety of devices 3) can export PDF/HTML/markdown for you. But I’d you want to edit the files without the app, you are better off just having a bunch of markdown files in a nextcloud folder.