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nvALT 2 (2021) (github.com/ttscoff)
60 points by tosh on Nov 13, 2022 | hide | past | favorite | 34 comments


Love NV and nvAlt! Still use multiple times daily. Set to keep things as individual files, Syncthing between machines, and to my iPhone (where I use 1Writer) via iCloud. Works great, shared notes is the only thing I miss from my prior nv/Simplenote setup.

I got both to compile for Apple Silicon and made an issue somewhere linking to my forks. May have been under the main scrot/nv repo.

Unfortunately, while I prefer nvAlt, it has continued to be intermittently buggy in other ways, so I've switched back to NV for the time being. Not good enough at C++ to debug things myself.

EDIT:

- https://github.com/scrod/nv/issues/392

- https://github.com/n8henrie/nv


loved nvalt, these days i'm using Simplenote (which is what i was using for syncing nvalt)


I used to use nvALT quite a bit. These days I use The Archive[1] instead.

[1]: https://zettelkasten.de/the-archive/


I switched to this also year(s) ago and am happy with this system. I have no urge to switch.


Probably worth noting the actual project page: https://brettterpstra.com/projects/nvalt/


For (neo)vim users, there's notational fzf [1], which also requires fzf to be installed [2]. For Emacs, there's Deft [3]. They all what to me are nvalt's core functionality which is fuzzy search into quick note creation/editing. They can also be used in conjunction with nvalt or other markdown based applications since all of them use plaintext. For Deft, you can also choose to create .org files.

[1] https://github.com/Alok/notational-fzf-vim

[2] https://github.com/junegunn/fzf

[3] https://jblevins.org/projects/deft/


Development continued as https://nvultra.com/ the successor of nvALT


Did it ever get released? Was under development for several years last I looked.


Not yet publicly released, but it's been in beta for a bit, I've been testing it since March. There's a support forum here: https://multimarkdown.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/community/topics/...


It’s not out yet. It’s the Duke Nukem Forever or Half Life 3 of text editors. I’ve been waiting for it for years and years at this point.

At this point I’m not sure it’s relevant. Obsidian has eaten its lunch.


Same. Just signed up for the newsletter and it reminded me I’d already signed up. But come to think of it, that was years ago :(


At one point I was so used to Notational Velocity that I needed it on Windows and didnt want to adopt other available solutions. So I built a barebones clone in Java: https://github.com/vinodkd/jNV.


One of the "fast" slim note taking software. Love the modeless operations. https://notational.net/ Still works on MacOS 12.6


nvAlt != Notational. nvAlt is a significantly divergent fork of a fork of Notational.


nvALT was one of my "gateway" apps into really finding my happy place. Before nvALT I thought Apple Notes was sufficient for me. It really revealed to me what things I wanted to be using notes for that I wasn't. But I also wanted more structure and a better mobile app than the Simplenote app.

Today Drafts fills the "easy entry" portion of nvALT, while a combination of Bear and Obsidian serve as the primary ways I organize information after that. But nvALT opened the door for me.


I’m the same exact way. Nvalt opened things for me. I now use Drafts as entry point too with Logseq, Noteplan, and Devonthink (all synced in weird ways) for organized info and daily work notes


One notable mention should also be nvPY: https://github.com/cpbotha/nvpy


> Simplenote syncing note-taking application, inspired by Notational Velocity and ResophNotes, but uglier and cross-platformerer.

Love the description.


Mentioned in this trending post:

Fast Software, the Best Software

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33584958 -> https://craigmod.com/essays/fast_software/


I adore nvALT. so much so i took a stab at making a clone in JavaScript to revel in all the subtle details you take for granted as a user but take a considerable amount of concentration to orchestrate all together as code.

https://github.com/bkeating/nakedNV


been working on one since 2018 https://hyperdraft.rosano.ca


I used it for a very long time and I loved it. Switched to Bear then to craft a few months ago. craft.do is the best app I’ve ever used. Kind of a different concept but really amazing once used for a few days


paying a subscription for a simple markdown app seems ridiculous.


It’s really far from a simple markdown app. Ton of amazing features + cloud sync in all platforms. There’s a free forever plan as well so …

There is just no competitor with as much features and support for all platforms with cloud sync. It’s in its own league. Monthly features are added and the UX is top notch.


I replaced it with fsnotes, when you disable the sidebar and tweak some settings you get the same thing.

https://fsnot.es


My new love is neovim with fzf, binding fzf to CTRL+O (replicating Obsidian perfectly). All the power of vim, and much faster than Obsidian to start-up.


Lots of note taking apps mentioned here. FSNotes (for Mac and iOS) is another alternative that works pretty well for keeping plain-text Markdown notes.


Bear app is super fast. Supports Markdown. And is beautiful to look at. Bear 2 is looking even better.


Thanks for positing this, I was using nvALT, I love this app.


Daily user of nvAlt for years!

I switched to LogSeq about 3 months ago.


I get why this is a driver. What about Obsidian[1]?

[1]: https://obsidian.md/


Obsidian (or Roam, Logseq, or Athens) feels like a different vehicle for information, it's useful when notetaking something that needs more structure (like a class).

nvAlt (and Simplenote) has felt better for faster scribbles or notes that are technical cheatsheets and such.


I don’t know. I used nvAlt daily for many years, then Ulysses, then Obsidian as of a few weeks go. They feel very similar to me.

They are all “very fast text editors that store your notes in a folder of text files and search them instantly.” I don’t think that the category needs a more specific definition than that.


Depends on what you feel about Electron apps? :)




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