# Heynote [![GitHub release (latest SemVer)](https://img.shields.io/github/v/release/heyman/heynote)](https://github.com/heyman/heynote/releases) [![Build Status](https://github.com/heyman/heynote/workflows/Tests/badge.svg)](https://github.com/heyman/heynote/actions?query=workflow%3ATests) Heynote is a dedicated scratchpad for developers. It functions as a large persistent text buffer where you can write down anything you like. Works great for that Slack message you don't want to accidentally send, a JSON response from an API you're working with, notes from a meeting, your daily to-do list, etc. The Heynote buffer is divided into blocks, and each block can have its own Language set (e.g. JavaScript, JSON, Markdown, etc.). This gives you syntax highlighting and lets you auto-format that JSON response. Available for Mac, Windows, and Linux. ## Features - Persistent text buffer - Block-based - Syntax highlighting: C++, C#, Clojure, CSS, Erlang, Go, HTML, Java, JavaScript, JSX, TypeScript, TOML, TSX, JSON, Lezer, Markdown, PHP, Python, Ruby, Rust, Shell, SQL, XML, YAML - Language auto-detection - Auto-formatting - Math/Calculator mode - Currency conversion - Multi-cursor editing - Dark & Light themes - Option to set a global hotkey to show/hide the app - Default or Emacs-like key bindings ## Installation Download the appropriate (Mac, Windows or Linux) version from the latest Github release (or from [heynote.com](https://heynote.com)). The Windows build is not signed, so you might see some scary warning (I can not justify paying a yearly fee for a certificate just to get rid of that). ### Notes on Linux installation It's been reported [(#48)](https://github.com/heyman/heynote/issues/48) that ChromeOS's Debian VM need the following packages installed to run the Heynote AppImage: ``` libfuse2 libnss3 libnspr4 ``` ## Development To develop Heynote you need Node.js and you should (hopefully) just need to check out the code and then run: ``` > npm install > npm run dev ``` ### Contributions I'm happy to merge contributions that fit my vision for the app. Bug fixes are always welcome. ## FAQ ### Where is the buffer data stored? The default paths for the buffer data for the respective OS are: - Mac: `~/Library/Application Support/Heynote/buffer.txt` - Windows: `%APPDATA%\Heynote\buffer.txt` - Linux: `~/.config/Heynote/buffer.txt` From version >=1.5.0, symlinks will be supported and you'll be able to configure the path where `buffer.txt` is stored. ### Can you make a mobile app? No, at the moment this is out of scope, sorry. ### Can you add a feature for naming blocks and/or adding tags? [(#44)](https://github.com/heyman/heynote/issues/44) Currently, I'm not planning on adding this. The main reason is that it goes against the scratchpadness of the program. I can totally see the usefulness of such a feature, and it's definitely something that I would expect from a more traditional Notes app. However a large part of Heynote's appeal is it's simplicity, and if that is to remain so, I'm going to have to say no to a lot of actually useful features. ### What are the default keyboard shortcuts? **On Mac** ``` ⌘ + Enter Add new block below the current block ⌘ + Shift + Enter Split the current block at cursor position ⌘ + L Change block language ⌘ + Down Goto next block ⌘ + Up Goto previous block ⌘ + A Select all text in a note block. Press again to select the whole buffer ⌘ + ⌥ + Up/Down Add additional cursor above/below ⌥ + Shift + F Format block content (works for JSON, JavaScript, HTML, CSS and Markdown) ``` **On Windows and Linux** ``` Ctrl + Enter Add new block below the current block Ctrl + Shift + Enter Split the current block at cursor position Ctrl + L Change block language Ctrl + Down Goto next block Ctrl + Up Goto previous block Ctrl + A Select all text in a note block. Press again to select the whole buffer Ctrl + Alt + Up/Down Add additional cursor above/below Alt + Shift + F Format block content (works for JSON, JavaScript, HTML, CSS and Markdown) Alt Show menu ``` ### Can Math blocks do X? Heynote's Math blocks are powered by [Math.js](https://mathjs.org/). Checkout their [documentation](https://mathjs.org/docs/reference/index.html) to see what [functions](https://mathjs.org/docs/reference/functions.html) and [constants](https://mathjs.org/docs/reference/constants.html) are available. ## Thanks! Heynote is built upon [CodeMirror](https://codemirror.net/), [Vue](https://vuejs.org/), [Electron](https://www.electronjs.org/), [Math.js](https://mathjs.org/), [Prettier](https://prettier.io/) and other great open-source projects.