Hello again everyone, Dihar here. It’s been a while since the last release of treedome, but here you go! This release is all about UI update, emojis, and bug fixes. Please consult this git diff
for a more detailed changelog https://codeberg.org/solver-orgz/treedome/compare/0.4.5...0.5.0. These are the highlight of the release.
- Add emoji picker for title, will show up in tree!
- Text Editor toolbar is back, now with option to toggle both toolbar and floating menu independently!
- Checkbox is here! Thanks Mantine UI!
- You can check the size of each notes by navigating to Escape Menu -> Configure -> Show Note Sizes!
- Add created/last modified date in notes. Note created before this will not have this field and will set as today’s date!
- Create child note can now be done through dropdown instead of only from shortcuts!
- Fix bugs of saving empty tree
- General UI update and more stability for auto scrolling in tree view
- Documentation update
I suggest you to use something like a git repository + vscode + foam (https://github.com/foambubble/foam).
It’s not that future proof, it is using non standard extensions to markdown from what i can tell, so other software would not work with it . The most future proof alternative is creating some standard that is the result of a consensus among multiple implementations (maybe by enhancing common mark? but that seems like the wrong place).
Its future proof tho? Markdown has a standard (or at least a common implementation) and foam is just a tool to automate and graph all the boring parts?
Yeah but as far as i can tell it still has extensions (see this) , there is no process including RFC where a standard is ratified like ISO/ECMA does for stuff like HTML/javascript/C++ or the open document format. i have some stuff that is more then a decade old that really don’t want to lose.
the extension could cease to exist, but you can absolutely still access your notes with any text editor decades from now. I still don’t get where the “non-future proof” here. Can’t really be more future proof than a simple text file.
Arguably, open document format, although standardized, are harder to open and manage because it’s far more complex than a text file that ends with .md
.