8/3/2023 0 Comments Bear vs nvalt![]() ![]() If its a simple task (or something I want to have in a shared list) I use action to publish them to the desired todoist project and the Draft itself will be deleted. I’m still in the progress of changing the setup and merging all important note into the new system I use but this is how / what I use at the moment (or how I want to use the tools): Since the beginning of the year I started struggling with evernote more and more - because its too buggy to use and too slow at the moment. With Drafts 5 I started to learn JS and build my own script-based actions to simplify my workflows. I used Drafts 4 just as a starting point and then sent my notes to Todoist (if it was a task) or to evernote (if it was project related, some meeting notes or any other note). My use of Drafts changed very much since I dig a little bit deeper into JS and Drafts 5 came out. ![]() Looking forward to hearing more about alternative or similar perspectives… posting a draft to social media or a web page, or exporting a finished piece of writing for submission) there’s often little benefit in pushing my drafts elsewhere. I’ve reached a point in my experience of Drafts where, beyond specific functions (e.g. But Drafts is the app I feel most comfortable authoring the vast majority of my text based work in- it’s amazingly extensible, has a fantastic community, and I’m really keen to reduce the amount of scatter in my set-up. I’m still bouncing between Evernote, DevonThink and Readdle Documents to manage PDFs, web archives and other documents that aren’t text files. I also use it as an information store alongside iThoughts.Įven on iOS, I’ve tried a range of other options for different aspects of the work I do (DevonThink, iA Writer, Scrivener etc). I store creative writing (a large part of my “real” work), essays, social media posts (really useful as some tweet-storms are first draft essays), excerpts from web pages, journal entries, work logs, and all the other miscellany that ends up in a note-taking inbox. As I’ve come to lean on iOS more and more for getting real work done, and particularly with recent updates, I’ve gone all in on Drafts. When macOS was my daily go-to I went through all of the better known favourites for managing notes, finally settling on HogBay’s FoldingText + Dropbox, which worked pretty well in conjunction with Editorial on the iPad. ![]() I’m primarily an iPad user (writer, educator, programme director, lightweight coder) who occasionally breaks out a MacBook Air for heavier lifting. More and more, I’m coming to depend on Drafts as my primary text-base, and thus far I’m quite happy. ![]()
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