![]() ![]() Rather than reinventing Search, you might be better served by a more configurable engine, such as free DocFetcher. Though Nirsoft's free tool, ESEDatabaseView, can be used to view that type of file, Windows.edb is locked by the Windows Search Engine, when in use, so the best you can do with that data is to stop indexing and Search to unlock it, leaving you with out-of-date data. The data is located in C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Search\Data\Applications\Windows\Windows.edb, and there are auxiliary indexes in subfolders of Search. Maybe they'll re-open the Android version soon.This feature is not built into Windows Search, though it might have that frequency data stored internally in Extensible Storage Engine format. There may be hope for Boostnote, though, as it's currently under very active development. I guess I'm stuck with either Simplenote or Boostnote if I don't want to shell out $50 for a markdown editor. It is still available for all desktop platforms. Recently, I began playing around with Boostnote, which is a beautiful editor that used to be available for Android, though they've recalled this support. I might as well just edit my notes directly from Dropbox. I can't be asked to do this on each machine I'm working on. StackEdit seems fine but also a bit of work (I need to connect it to a Dropbox account or something similar to sync my notes). This was the reason I was looking for a new editor in the first place. The markdown formatting has a few ugly bugs which cause lists to be spaced weird or not detected. The markdown editing works pretty well in it, though I don't like that you have to put an empty line before the beginning of a list. IA Writer charges for each platform you want to install it on, so it could end up costing me almost $50, though that is for a lifetime installation. Still, this would cost over $50 by my third year of use and would only continue to rise in price after that. Inkdrop is almost $50 per year, though they offer a 60% discount to students and educators (which I would avail of). I've removed most of the in-browser options, as well, because they don't offer some features I really need (saving and syncing notes automatically). Here are some common browser-based markdown editors: In-browser editors, by default, work on all platforms because they run in a web browser. Note that lots of IDEs / code editors have support for markdown, as well, including Atom, VS Code, Brackets, and more. † free during beta, will be $30 with v1.0 * macOS version is free during beta testing I've looked through lots of pages of recommended markdown editors and here are most available markdown editors as of March 2019: ideally has a preview pane which updates instantly.must be cross platform (at minimum: Windows, macOS, Android).So I decided to look for a new markdown editor. While it's fully cross-platform (Windows, Linux, macOS, Android, iOS) and auto-syncs your notes, it's markdown rendering can be a bit ugly and finnicky. ![]() I've started to grow a bit weary of my current markdown editor, Simplenote. I guess I have a new markdown editor! Thanks, Alissa! * by connecting to Dropbox, OneDrive, Nextcloud, WebDAV, or others supports mass-exporting of notes to multiple formats (markdown, JSON, etc.).has language-specific syntax highlighting in code blocks.provides standard notebooks and tags features.has a split markdown preview / editing layout.synchronises notes across your devices*.works on all platforms: Windows, Linux, macOS, iOS, Android.is 100% completely free (but feel free to donate).We have a winner! Alissa McGee suggested Joplin, which: ![]()
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