3.9 KiB
Heynote Documentation
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.
Default Key Bindings
On Mac
⌘ + Enter Add new block below the current block
⌥ + Enter Add new block before the current block
⌘ + Shift + Enter Add new block at the end of the buffer
⌥ + Shift + Enter Add new block at the start of the buffer
⌘ + ⌥ + 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
Alt + Enter Add new block before the current block
Ctrl + Shift + Enter Add new block at the end of the buffer
Alt + Shift + Enter Add new block at the start of the buffer
Ctrl + Alt + 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
Download/Installation
Download the appropriate (Mac, Windows or Linux) version from 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) that ChromeOS's Debian VM need the following packages installed to run the Heynote AppImage:
libfuse2
libnss3
libnspr4
Math Blocks
Heynote's Math blocks are powered by Math.js expressions. Checkout their documentation to see what syntax, functions, and constants are available.
Accessing the previous result
The variable prev
can be used to access the previous result. For example:
128
prev * 2 # 256
Changing how the results of Math blocks are formatted
You can define a custom format
function within the Math block like this:
_format = format # store reference to the built in format
format(x) = _format(x, {notation:"exponential"})
You can also do something like this to show the number with your default locale or provide a custom one:
format(x) = x.toLocaleString();
format(x) = x.toLocaleString('en-GB');
See the Math.js format() function for more info on what's supported.
The buffer file
The default paths for the buffer data for the respective operating systems are:
- Mac:
~/Library/Application Support/Heynote/buffer.txt
- Windows:
%APPDATA%\Heynote\buffer.txt
- Linux:
~/.config/Heynote/buffer.txt