I’ve also added a bunch of other good apps that I used briefly. I managed to avoid this issue by using Input as the font, but it’s strange to me that Apple doesn’t seem to treat this app as well as others, like Mail for instance.īelow you will find a list of six main apps that I tried and considered for this very important role, and that I can recommend to anyone reading these lines. The only thing that is really annoying about it is the lack of a line-height setting when using plain text mode. I’ve used TextEdit as my only writing app for a few months, and it’s fine. If I want to consider myself somehow serious about this blog, I figured an extra app dedicated to write was justified and necessary to be added in this setup. In a quest for a minimalistic setup, I wanted to find the app that was good enough to either replace or complete TextEdit in my writing workflow. Blame Brett Terpstra’s excellent Markdown service tools, Blot simple and efficient file structure, and TextEdit for being more than adequate to write and edit the few blog posts I manage to publish each year. ![]() My workflow doesn’t really call for all its features anymore. ![]() ![]() I’ve stopped using Drafts a couple of months ago, but I still love Drafts. Two years ago, I switched from iA Writer to Drafts. Finding a native and fast text editor for the Mac in 2022・The Jolly Teapot The Jolly Teapotby Nicolas Magand・ About this site・ RSS Finding a native and fast text editor for the Mac in 2022
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