

I can't complain.Īnd yes, if some of the people clamoring for open source Typora stopped clamoring and started building one, and it started to catch up to Typora, I'd jump ship and even join the effort. No other editor is even close in other respects. Most importantly rock solid support for GFM (which is now officially a superset of CommonMark). It would be awesome if some of the open issues were addressed sooner than later.
#Typora source code software
That is why so many of us use it (and call it one of the best pieces of software we use). one of the best pieces of software you use desperately needs a reboot?) And it's rather rude for anyone but him to "reboot the project". We can only beg him to make it open source. Sure, open source would be nice, but that's not our call.

That way people can subscribe to this topic for notifications without getting notifications that are just Huh? You say it's "one of the best pieces of software" yet you worry it's falling asleep? That's like worrying that the runner at the front of the race isn't running fast enough despite the fact that he's still running (Typora gets updated pretty frequently), still ahead, and nobody is catching up. 👍 this post.įor the +1 comments, clicking the top posts 👍 is enough.
#Typora source code code
Typora is the only one out of the WYSIWYG editors that handles the intertwining of code and rendered content so well.Įvery now and then I even consider building my own. In code editors, but instead in WYSIWYG editors like Typora.

Being able to write other things that are autocompleted and turned into rendered blocks would be great. Open-sourcing will also allow for extensions. I already have a use case where I could do with the typora editing interface. Open-source the editing interface, and have the app paid. Typora is great editing interface trapped in a single application use case. Once that I can customise and use for other applications. I love typora, but will always be on a lookout for an open-source equivalent for it.
