

>new dev, no news on the app’s future), and expressed relief that it It allows users to easily create lists, checklists, bold text, and headings. (This after palming it off to Mutahhir in 2018 whereupon development stalled and he took back ownership. FoldingText is a feature-rich text editor for Macs with a built-in markup language.
#FOLDINGTEXT DOWNLOAD#
Over the summer Jesse announced a free download of a bugfix version of the app and was surprisingly bullish on the apps resuscitation. It’s my next stab at a plain text productivity.
>that he sold the app again to another dev (no name, no intro from the FoldingText 3 < Next Topic Back to topic list Previous Topic > Posted by satis at 04:40 AM. It takes what I’ve learned building TaskPaper and tries to keep the good stuff, fix the mistakes, and make it more flexible.>I just noticed that Jesse edited his post a couple of weeks ago to note >after palming it off to Mutahhir in 2018 whereupon development stalled >the app and was surprisingly bullish on the apps resuscitation. Over the summer Jesse announced a free download of a bugfix version of So I guess at least we know who’s taken over… I was coincidentally re-visiting FoldingText the other day and discovered that the ‘’ URL now points to this page: >stability my recommendation would be to look elsewhere perhaps. If you are looking for a long term solution and Beautiful square, folding brocade text protector in a green and gold flowers pattern. >the information management space the scale tips towards the “it’s worth Green and Gold Flower Folding Text Cover. I’d still say that for someone who loves tinkering with tools in >particular developer has published many of which are dead in the water >I, too, have licences for pretty much all of the apps that this The latest version of TaskPaper was amazing (AND a very good outliner, what’s more!), but no iOS version, no roadmap… grrrr. If you are looking for a long term solution and stability my recommendation would be to look elsewhere perhaps. I’d still say that for someone who loves tinkering with tools in the information management space the scale tips towards the “it’s worth it” side but only just. 7 Christopher Marlow, The folding text: Doctor Who, adaptation and fan fiction, in Rachel Carroll, ed., Adaptation in Contemporary Culture: Textual. I, too, have licences for pretty much all of the apps that this particular developer has published many of which are dead in the water now. So, I guess one could try to be hopeful about FoldingText, but after passing it around, then taking it back and and doing nothing to it for years, only to be sold to an unknown dev with no follow-up to users or potential users, does not augur well.Īnd given how little has been done with TaskPaper over the years (which I own) I’m not exactly counting the days until Jesse’s “next app” is released. I just noticed that Jesse edited his post a couple of weeks ago to note that he sold the app again to another dev (no name, no intro from the new dev, no news on the app’s future), and expressed relief that it “Gets me a little closer time wise to public start of my next app.” (This after palming it off to Mutahhir in 2018 whereupon development stalled and he took back ownership.) For anyone who works with lists and wants a simple and uncluttered way to edit them, Folding Text provides a worthy entrant into a field dominated by the Omni Group and Cultured Code.Over the summer Jesse announced a free download of a bugfix version of the app and was surprisingly bullish on the apps resuscitation. What Folding Text delivers is a clean Markdown-based editor with a lot of end-user control over what you see and what you hide. For example, if you're working on a complicated schedule, Folding Text can hide away extraneous bits until you're ready to deal with them. This allows you to concentrate on just one part of your organization work at a time. Keeping the isolated WriteRoom philosophy in mind, Folding Text can also "focus" on a portion of a list. By renaming your file with the appropriate extension (myfile.todo or myfile.timer), you unlock feature sets that add further structure to your lists. These help you keep track of tasks to complete as well as when they should occur. Its enormous feature set makes me think that the people who develop this tool also use this tool, and are growing it to accommodate real-world practical needs.įor example, the app offers a checkbox-based "todo" mode and a time-annotated "timer" mode. To say Folding Text is a to-do list editor that allows you to show and hide sections is to miss a great deal of the application's nuance. Brought to you by the developers of WriteRoom and TaskPaper, it displays Hog Bay Software's commitment to clean interface design supporting strong text features. Folding Text (US$14.99) is a handy Markdown-based editing app for the Mac.
