![]() ![]() Here, I’m referring to the latter idea: Back-linking in terms of being able to link a specific term (or number of words, like a name) and have one core spot to see all the different places I’ve linked those terms.īoth Craft and NotePlan 3 have this type of back-linking available, and in my daily note-taking, the experience was largely the same. The second is the ability to see all the different places where that term is referenced in one summarized spot. The first is the ability to find all references of a particular term in a database or array of files and create a clickable link wherever that term is referenced. ![]() To my understanding, there are a few features that come to mind when the term “back-linking” is used. Today, I want to compare Craft and NotePlan 3 directly, with a discussion on why I’ve moved to Craft and what I’m hoping the Craft team improves and fixes in the weeks and months to come. With Craft’s latest calendar integration features, a dedicated daily note-taking feature is available in your own private space in the app, making Craft a direct daily note-taking competitor to all the other options out there. You could create a makeshift daily note-taking process inside Craft (which I did), but there was no direct built-in feature. Craft satisfied back-linking, tasks, and file storage, but did not have a daily note-taking feature until its last release.NotePlan 3 satisfies back-linking and tasks, but does not support file storage at this point in time.Roam Research satisfies all three of the above needs in flying colors, but costs a daunting $20 USD/month.Of the three note-taking apps I’ve discussed so far: I find having the image quickly and easily referencable inside my daily note-taking app to be the best workflow for this sort of thing. For this type of file storage, I mainly mean “the ability to save screenshots and snippets for quick reference.” A good example of this would be receiving important information from a client via iMessage, at which point I could save the image/screenshot/blurb in a deeper folder in OneDrive, or I can quickly save it to the client’s “permanent file” for visual reference whenever I jump into the file. For those types of file storage, OneDrive, iCloud Drive, and Dropbox are kings in the arena. ![]()
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