Thanks very much for the quick and helpful I tried Curio a couple years ago, and I’ve been trying it again since CPN closed. Not to confuse matters – but there’s also Alfons Schmid’s Notebooks, which is solidly integrated with OS X and iOS and is a beautiful note-book oriented work. In conjunction with DEVONthink with which both Curio and Tinderbox play very well. Sorry I can’t be more specific – truly this is an apples-oranges question and both products should be in a serious note-taker’s repertory, IMO. Tinderbox is a life-time occupation - I’ve known few users who get fully into the capabilities - though Mark Anderson’s aTbRef is one of the most in-depth privately maintained references for any software that I know of. Curio uses standard graphical features (“figures”) and figures have far fewer attributes – mainly for task planning and status. Notes in Tinderbox can have a vast array of attributes assigned to them (oddly, linking to specific text in a note is not easy). It’s very obvious how to use Curio, less so for Tinderbox. Scan the user manuals/help for each, too, to see how the features work. The best comparison test is to try to emulate, from scratch (no cut and paste!) one of your favorite CPN notebooks in each product. Both Eastgate (Tinderbox) and Zengobi (Curio) have very active and helpful user forums, the developers are involved and always available for private questions, and I’m sure each of them would be flexible if you needed a long trial. The best thing to do is download a trial copy and see how each of them work with your requirements. So, Tinderbox or Curio (if we disregard the pricing issue)? I know that onenote can do this, but I prefer indy developers to MS, and onenote has some serious problems on the mac. Does anyone have any ideas on a workaround to tag something like a paragraph and then see everything with that tag later.įor example, do users have a way to just tag a paragraph as “todo” and then later see those todo’s gathered together?Īny thoughts anyone has on this would be greatly appreciated. I use tagging extensively in DT, but only at the file level. Then later you search for the tag “problem” or “todo” and see all the tagged items along with their context and a link back to the correct spot in the original. Here’s what I mean: CPN is (was) beautiful as a project notebook, because you could simply tag just one item on your page with, for example, “problem” or “todo” or “urgent” or “idea” and then just continue writing. Unfortunately, CP just shut its doors last week, so notebook users are struggling to replace its benefits. I use it in combination with Circusponies Notebook (CPN) though because CPN has one amazing feature that even DT doesn’t have: The ability to tag a portion of a page and then gather all those tagged bits together across many different pages. I love its flexibility and excellent design. I’ve used DT for years gather everything and keep it organized. Whatever your reason for wanting to save a note from OneNote as a PDF, it’s easy to do no matter what platform you use for the application.Īnd for additional help, check out how to use OneNote templates or how to enable dark mode in OneNote.Circusponies closed its doors last week and I’m struggling to try to use DT exclusively now. How to Save a Webpage as a PDF in Safari.How to Save a Webpage as a PDF in Firefox.Save a Webpage as a PDF from Microsoft Edge. How to Save a Web Page as PDF from Google Chrome.Please check out the following how-tos for saving your note as a PDF using OneNote for the web. Note that your options may differ depending on the browser you use. So, you’ll need to rely on your browser to do the work. OneNote on the web doesn’t currently offer an export or save as PDF feature. Click File from the menu bar and choose Save as PDF.If you use the OneNote app on your Mac, saving a note as a PDF is the easiest of the bunch. Optionally, you can change the name of the file.And notice that you can export a section or notebook if you like. Below Export Current, be sure Page is selected.Click File from the menu and choose Export on the left.Launch OneNote and open the note you want to export.The OneNote desktop application for Windows makes the option to export a note as a PDF a bit easier to find. Name your file, choose a location to save it, and click Save.In the Printer drop-down list, choose Microsoft Print to PDF.Click Settings and More (three dots) on the top right and select Print.Launch OneNote for Windows 10 and open the note you want to export.If you use OneNote for Windows 10, the export to PDF option isn’t obvious. And we’ll explain the steps for OneNote for Windows 10, the desktop version, on Mac, and on the web. Whatever your reason, we’ll show you how to export a note from OneNote as a PDF document.
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