Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

I feel like Bear[0] comes pretty close. I’ve been using it for the last few months and it’s one of the few apps I’ve found that actually allows me to just go in and take a note/jot down a quick blurb as needed.

I tried to use Evernote and it just never stuck with me. It felt like it was too much overhead just for capturing quick ideas.

[0]https://bear.app/



+1 for Bear. I used Evernote for years but it finally became too slow and bloated with several thousand notes and tons of features I never use. I need a lightweight note app, if it takes more than a second or two to fire up the app and jot down a note then that’s a fail.

Bear is working well for me. The only thing I don’t like is no audio notes and weird formatting which makes copy pasting bulleted notes into other editors somewhat painful. Still my default note app and likely to stay that way for the foreseeable future (or until I have thousands of notes again causing performance to degrade...)


I liked and used bear when it just came out, but it is moving at a glacial pace when it comes to adding certain important features, such as adding support for tables and equations.

Bear has a very good story when it comes to sync with the iPhone. But if you need cross-platform support, tables, equations, and such features org-mode, Typora, etc. are much better options.


>such as adding support for tables and equations.

If tables and equations are "crucial" it's not just about a notes app anymore...


why can't a note have tables and equations? Both seem quite useful (equations especially as that's just a compressed sentence in a way)


We can, but they introduce tons of challenges in rendering and display, change the serialization format (whereas basic stuff can just be edited and viewed as plain text) etc.

Besides where does one stop in a note taking app? One could also ask for footnotes, bibliography management, graphs and plots, handwriting recognition, PDF management, and so on...


Bear supports Latex. You can try writing your equations and tables in a Latex code block.


I like bear, it’s my current note app besides .git. I wish they’d improve their code formatting.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: