Yes, if SiYuan stops being developed, you can still get your notes exported as markdown files. Since SiYuan is open-source, you can also use the internal code to parse the JSON format notes.
Mathematica is great, but they are keeping adding something confusing me. This time they added chess supporting. Though impressive, I doubt any user of Mathematica -- mostly math and physics people -- will use it. If I…
There are plenty of apps written with Electron, which has styles far from "native" UI. But most people should not think of them as wrong.
Finding a USB DisplayPort cable from your drawer should not be harder than finding a HDMI cable if correctly marked.
> Now imagine an editor like Neovim, but instead of working through 30 years of cruft and legacy code, it's built from the start using modern software engineering techniques and incorporates such features into its core…
Why not? Isn't that &T like a read only wrapper of T?
Yes, if SiYuan stops being developed, you can still get your notes exported as markdown files. Since SiYuan is open-source, you can also use the internal code to parse the JSON format notes.
Mathematica is great, but they are keeping adding something confusing me. This time they added chess supporting. Though impressive, I doubt any user of Mathematica -- mostly math and physics people -- will use it. If I…
There are plenty of apps written with Electron, which has styles far from "native" UI. But most people should not think of them as wrong.
Finding a USB DisplayPort cable from your drawer should not be harder than finding a HDMI cable if correctly marked.
> Now imagine an editor like Neovim, but instead of working through 30 years of cruft and legacy code, it's built from the start using modern software engineering techniques and incorporates such features into its core…
Why not? Isn't that &T like a read only wrapper of T?