To format text in a Paper doc, highlight the text you want to edit. A toolbar will appear that will let you format your text, including:
Hosting on Dropbox Place the markdown file in your Public folder, then right/option click to get it's public link. Use this public link with deckdown. More info on public links from dropbox help. StackEdit can sync your files with Google Drive, Dropbox and GitHub. It can also publish them as blog posts to Blogger, WordPress and Zendesk. You can choose whether to upload in Markdown format, HTML, or to format the output using the Handlebars template engine.
- Bold
- Strikethrough
- Highlight
- Create link
- Large header
- Medium header
- Create bulleted list
- Create to-do
- Add comment
Note: Some formatting options, like italicizing and underlining, are only available via keyboard shortcuts. For a full list of keyboard shortcuts, click the keyboard shortcuts button (it looks like a keyboard) at the bottom-right of your Paper doc.
Does Dropbox Paper have spell check?
Dropbox Paper does not have its own spell checker. If your browser has a built-in spell checker, you can use that. If you want to turn off spell checking, you'll have to do so through your browser settings.
How to format a block of text
You can format a block of text by using keyboard shortcuts. For example, you can convert a bulleted list to a numbered list. For a full list of block formatting keyboard shortcuts, click the keyboard shortcuts button (it looks like a keyboard) at the bottom-right of your Paper doc.
How to format text on the Dropbox Paper mobile app
- Open the Paper mobile app.
- Open the Paper doc you want to format.
- Tap into a new line or tap Edit and the formatting options will appear above your keyboard.
Dropbox Markdown
The fear
Since my child is born, I realised many things. And one of them is how much time and energy are precious resources. For example, you don’t get to have so much time anymore to take care of you digital life. This can potentially have bad consequences.
And as things start to pile up like disorganised notes, unsorted pictures,… you start growing a fear that at some point, something is gonna happen and some things will get lost. If you’re using 3rd party softwares or services, one of these things could be due to one of the services shuting down and suddenly you need to transfer all the files to somewhere else.
So the challenge is to find systems to organise you life that are portable, easy & enjoyable to use and that don’t require too much maintenance.
As I have less time to take care of all that, I try to simplify all my processes and think about how can they can survive the years.
By the way, this is quite hard for me as I’m quite a «tool freak».
Atom & Markdown to the rescue
As I’m a programmer, I use Atom everyday for my work. So I told myself that it would be actually silly not to use it to read and write all the notes I could have taken in the past.
I used be a heavy Evernote user back in days until they announced their new pricing model. Then I switched to Synology Notes, partly because they had an import script from Evernote.
Now I still haven’t found a great way to transfer the old notes (hence my current portability concerns) but I started to experiment with Atom to write the new ones.
When you work in a raw text environment, the easiest way to write decent notes is to use markdown. Also you have a ton of markdown editors on the market, so even if Atom dies, I’ll probably find something to replace it.
Now Markdown has little support in Atom by default but there are a great bunch of plugin that make it much better.
I experimented with all of them and ended up with a selection of what I believe are the most convenient. You will probably have a different setup than mine. That’s totally ok and This why I love Atom.
The setup
There are mainly 4 parts that you should be concerned with:
Dropbox Markdown Download
The writing experience: Is the syntax highlighting good enough to quickly scan the page? Are they snippets to make you write faster?
The previewing part: Sometime, you really need to see how the text is gonna look. Also useful when writing markdown slides.
Navigating / searching: This goes without saying. Though I haven’t experimented with a lot heavy files, Code repos have a lot of them and the experience is pretty fast.
The exporting/sync part: You want to find a way to keep all this sync between all your devices or share it to world.
So here is the list of packages you will need to replicate my setup for markdown:
Basic language support
Buy Navicat Essentials in Navicat online store. The Navicat Site License Program (SLP) allows corporations or institutions the right to use a specific number of Navicat licenses concurrently in one physical location. Essentials: Enterprise: General: MySQL 3.21 or later, Drizzle, OurDelta, and Percona Server: MariaDB 5.1 or later: MongoDB 3.0 or later: Oracle 8.1 or later ( macOS Edition starts from Oracle 9i ). Download a free 14 days trial of Navicat Essentials and try the latest features in Navicat version 15. Navicat Download Navicat Essentials 14-day trial versions for Windows, macOS and Linux Products. Navicat Essentials is for commercial use and is available for MySQL, MariaDB, MongoDB, SQL Server, PostgreSQL, Oracle, and SQLite databases. If you need to administer all aforementioned database servers at the same time, there is also Navicat Premium Essentials which allows you to access multiple servers from a single application.
For better previewer, slides generator, code highlighting, table of content generator and auto open + a million other more advanced features.
Adds tons of features to make Atom an even better Markdown/AsciiDoc editor!
Works great with static blogging as well. Try it with Jekyll, Octopress, Hexo or any of your favorite static blog engines.
To mark github flavored md task as done.
Adds a neat toolbar when too lazy to type.
Dropbox Markdown Software
Super useful sidebar that shows you the document structure ala google docs.
A nice theme
Dropbox Markdown Preview
A great syntax theme. Good balance quality between code and md support.
Gotchas
One of the remaining «not perfect» things is that you now need a place to store the medias that you want to display in all those markdown files.
One solution I found was to have a medias folder for each top level folder. Though sometimes, you would still want a more local folder with assets in case you’re preparing a presentation for example.
For syncing I could use git but I find dropbox a better fit in this case, and it still fits within the portability concerns I had.
If you have comments or suggestions about this setup don’t hesitate to reach out on twitter or mastodon :)