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Feature Request: Add section folding to the editor #81
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Also: #18 |
Hi @davistech, and thanks for the feature request! We've been researching this feature for a while, and we'd love to get more input on it. What are your use cases for folding (the scenarios where folding is helpful)? Thanks! |
Thanks for the quick response. I’ve just added Nota to my collection of markdown apps and am very impressed with it, but need the folding to be able to use it as my primary app.
I teach free workshops on various Mac topics to local groups (mostly retirees) and the technique I’ve developed for these is as follows. I use Keynote for formal presentations, but now use a combination of Obsidian + Multimarkdown Composer + Marked 2 for the workshops (taught on Zoom).
Obsidian has folding which is helpful when creating a workshop — helps focus on specific topics.
Multimarkdown Composer is my current default markdown external editor from Obsidian.
Marked 2 (Brett Terpstra) renders the markdown as RTF and all sections are foldable.
I can also present from Obsidian Preview mode and the sections are foldable which makes it easy to focus on the topics while presenting.
If Nota had folding then I would be able to use it as my primary markdown editor and bypass steps 2 and 3 in the workflow.
Obsidian works fine for presenting, but requires tweaking the CSS to render the font larger.
Let me know if I can provide more information.
Phil
… On Jun 24, 2021, at 11:53 AM, Emanuil Rusev ***@***.***> wrote:
Hi @davistech <https://github.com/davistech>, and thanks for the feature request!
We've been researching this feature for a while, and we'd love to get more input on it.
What are your use cases for folding (the scenarios where folding is helpful)?
Thanks!
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Phil, thanks for sharing this!
Have you experimented with alternative ways (that don't involve folding) to achieve the same (focus on a specific topic)? For example, breaking the document into files, where each topic is a separate file (that you can easily focus on). |
On Jun 24, 2021, at 1:11 PM, Emanuil Rusev ***@***.***> wrote:
Phil, thanks for sharing this!
Obsidian has folding which is helpful when creating a workshop — helps focus on specific topics.
Have you experimented with alternative ways (that don't involve folding) to achieve the same (focus on a specific topic)? For example, breaking the document into files, where each topic is a separate file (that you can easily focus on).
Yes. I’ve done that for years, but my current workflow is much more efficient and makes the process simpler. Easier to create, easier to update, easier to present, and easier to create notes and handouts for students.
Phil
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Phil, thanks for elaborating on that. This might be hard to answer, but do you have an explanation for what makes folding more efficient (or simpler)? One benefit I know about folding is that it makes it possible to see the 1st item and the 3rd item next to each other (because you collapsed the 2nd item). I wouldn't know how to achieve this using files. I'm looking for things like tihs. |
I collapse all sections, then open the section that I’m editing or presenting. I can collapse at the header level or at the list level (when there are sublists).
If you look at how Obsidian or Marked works you can see examples. I can do some screen captures to illustrate but it won’t be for a couple of days because I’m prepping for my next workshop tomorrow. Also I don’t want the images posted anywhere — for your use only.
Phil
… On Jun 25, 2021, at 4:41 AM, Emanuil Rusev ***@***.***> wrote:
Phil, thanks for elaborating on that. This might be hard to answer, but do you have an explanation for what makes folding more efficient (or simpler)? One benefit I know about folding is that it makes it possible to see the 1st item and the 3rd item next to each other (because you collapsed the 2nd item). I wouldn't know how to achieve this using files. I'm looking for things like tihs.
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Phil, thanks for this!
That would great! You can send it to support@nota.md -- we can delete it once we've had a look. |
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It would help to have the ability to fold at the header level. Even better, at the bullet level. An example can be found in Obsidian and Marked 2.
Thank you.
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