Then add a new entry of Ctrl W for a web picture. I'd also like to have Ctrl Something pop up the Insert Picture dialog. It's nothing big cause I can type the appropriate amount of = signs, but it'd be a nice easy step. I'd like Ctrl T to do that for me and put the cursor right in the middle ready to type. One really simple thing I want is to add a hotkey to the insert menu for Title. Once we've achieved compileability, then it's time to take a few baby steps and see how difficult it is to add or change things. Python-enchant (optional, needed for spell checking) I suspect right now you'd get about a zillion and three errors unless you have the dependencies installed too. Well, the first step is to make sure we can compile the whole thing and get the same. Okay Here I am inside the Python Shell with Rednotebook source loaded. Will try it out later and see how it performs. If it does the intended task well enough, given the others have reached a dead end, I guess there's not much point in pursuing something else. Never mind, RedNotebook it is then after all. But for the intended use here, doesn't quite make the cut. Oh well, this one did have potential and still isn't a bad piece of software. Usually when projects remain in a state of "prolonged stable beta", it's rarely a good sign for the future development of new features. I see Zim hasn't received recent updates (latest was in Jan 2016). The main executables (zim.exe) were identical in both versions. Couldn't notice any immediate differences in them either. Isn't the whole point of a portable app to run standalone with limited dependencies? The only difference seemed the data files are placed inside an "App" folder, making it appear like there are fewer files (when actually there are slightly more). It even needed installing and took just as long. Also there are locale files for practically every language on the planet!Īll this is very well for user choice, but is it really necessary by default, with no option to disable when installing? Hmm.Īlso for what it's worth, the portable installation was slightly larger. Funnily enough, a good proportion of these are images inside the "share\icons" folder. The desktop version expands from an 18MB download to 130MB and includes close to 7,000 files in the installation. When installing, the first thing I noticed was a whole load of bloat. Therefore, everything needs to be functional from the outset. I think the whole purpose here is to edit and view all pages in a single interface. Yes, it seems editing an exported HTML file is the only option, but that wouldn't be an automatic process and adds unneeded hassle. With so many files in the installation, all kinds of DLLs and such, you'd expect this to be included, but surprisingly it isn't. It'd need some sort of browser rendering ability for this to function, like how the post editor works here on ST. I'm guessing because the program just doesn't connect to the internet, so isn't able to retrieve
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