As the evolution and popularity of notes apps has advanced the interoperability of many programs; it has occurred to me that it would be desirable that the present WYSIWYG text editor support Markdown. This change would be powerful and unobtrusive.
For those familiar with the language it would allow for instant extension of Logos' capabilities and for those unaware or unwilling to use the language there would be no barrier to life as usual. Even the forums supports Markdown. Viva la Markdown
#####The Title didn't Render in Markdown.
I don't know why.
Is there something scary about Markdown that I should know? The reluctance is baffling.
I'm glad it's not just me. The formatting bar in the mobile apps is infuriating, especially when I am using my keyboard with my iPad.
It's not just text editors that use Markdown anymore. Most of the AI tools (the dreaded evil AI, I know) now use Markdown to format answers when you copy them out of the tool into a note. If I use one of these tools, I just dump the info into Obsidian because it'll take me forever to reformat everything in Logos.
I'd love to actually have my thoughts and info in one place instead of needing external programs to overcome the shortfalls of the "World's Premier" Bible study application
Yeah, on my Mac I use "Bear" and then it converts the Markdown to Rich Text that I can just copy/paste.
I want markdown!!! Please, one way to create and edits personal books, notes, sermons and any other text editing to be done in Logos.
At the very least, make it an option for those who want to use it.
At this point, it's a bug to not support markdown.
It's so goofy to have to use font sizes to give the illusion of hierarchy and it disrupts the flow of having to move my hands off of the keyboard to click on that drop-down.
Even if there are shortcut keys, RTF is not the way to go.
FWIW:
More suggested markdowns at this post.
the title says it. It used to take 1 click. Now it takes 3 clicks. This is not an improvement, to me!
Mobile Ed: NT202 A Survey of Jewish History and Literature from the Second Temple Period (10 hour course) A sincere request to add this into this month's Mobile Ed contents 🤩
I was reading through Charles Stanley's Handbook for Christian Living tonight. I noticed it has some concise yet useful articles on various counseling topics, but it doesn't appear in the Counseling Guide yet. This might be a good one to add to the Counseling Guide as another resource.
Please allow us to access, read, search, etc. our personal (user-created) books on the mobile app.
I have recently completed a MS in Learning Design and have been thinking of ways to incorporate learning theories into the preaching and discipleship ministries of the church. I think it would be helpful if Logos could develop an AI tool into its platform that would allow users to upload a sermon manuscript and then ask…