![]() ![]() This is a very useful feature, but at least on my computer (a 1.33 GHz 17″ PowerBook with 1.5 GB of RAM), the program takes an annoyingly long time to refresh to an added note view, although they contract instantly. You can display as many notes as you have room to show on your screen or telescope the note pad back to just one note or TOC (Table of Contents) page with button-clicks. There is also MultiView (image below), the convenient ability to display more than one note at once, which I find especially useful. Categories which can be used to further organize your notes, and you can create your own custom Categories. ![]() NoteOrganizer has two main features: Groups, which you can name and which look like folders in the Finder, and Categories, which have an icon, a color, and a name. The program is pretty intuitive, but TopXNotes controls automatically display “tooltips” popups in addition to a graphical image on the button to assist in explaining the control’s purpose.Īnother TopXNotes feature is the ability to assign categories to notes and use the NoteOrganizer Table of Contents window (right) to navigate your notepad and quickly find what you are looking for. ![]() TopXNotes allows you to export selected notes and groups to an iPod, retaining the original order and structure, and includes link recognition, groups and categories, templates, MultiView (for displaying more than one note at a time), and NoteOrganizer, an advanced table of contents for navigating your notes, for creating a table of contents. Happily, version 1.2 of TopXNotes now supports Apple’s basic F-key text editing commands for Cut, Copy, and Paste. TopXNotes lets you select font, font color, and font size, change note background color, and pick from a wide variety of text attributes, including underline, bold, italics, outline, shadow, condensed, and expanded text. TopXNotes organizes and provides convenient access to text information for fast retrieval with full styled and colored text, a wide range of fonts, and many other user-selectable text options. Happily, third party developers have thronged to fill the void vacated by Classic Note Pad Unfortunately, Apple abandoned Note Pad, first disabling its installation by default in Mac OS 9 (although it was still there in the Apple Extras folder) and then completely eliminating it in OS X in favor of the substitute enhanced Stickies feature – a Mac OS element I never warmed to in either Classic or OS X. It was there when I joined the Mac community with System 6.0.1. There must be a dozen or more applications available themed closely or loosely on Apple’s old Note Pad desk accessory, which dates back to System 6 days (and perhaps before). ![]()
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