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Evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies
Evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies









evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies
  1. #Evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies software
  2. #Evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies series

#Evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies software

Solution: PC (parent tag) \ PC Software (child tag), Mac (parent tag) \ Mac Software (child tag) you can’t have a Software tag under a PC category and a Mac category too.

evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies

With tags, the tree paradigm is turned on its head in a way, but I find that I can do any kind of hierachical organising that I would with, say, UltraRecall or Surfulater. an item being included in more than one branches of the tree) given that an Evernote item can have multiple tags. For me this is a direct equivalent of a ‘classic’ hierarchical tree allowing clones (i.e.

evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies

Has anyone else done any experiments along these lines?įWIW, Evernote does have a hierarchical tree, for organising tags. The example above is a deliberately simple one I can imagine creating a more elaborate note of cross-links that would constitute an outline for an article or a chapter in a book. (I can also add an explanatory phrase about each linked note if its title is too cryptic.) It’s slightly more time-consuming to do this in EN than in MyInfo, but it does seem to work reasonably well, and it then gives me all the additional benefits of Evernote (cross-platform syncing, excellent tagging system, etc.). So I create a new note in EN called something like “John Doe: Summary” in which I place links to all the major notes about Doe, in an order of my choice. What I am trying to do at the moment is to replicate that procedure in Evernote.

#Evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies series

In the tree I set up a node for “John Doe” and then create a series of sub-notes in any order that I want. In a hierarchical program like MyInfo, it’s easy to organize this sort of material. Furthermore, I can’t create a tag for each of my ancestors, because that would make the tag list too long. I can of course search for both first and last names, but in some notes the name may be rendered differently (an initial instead of a first name, for instance), and unless I use some very convoluted note-naming procedures, EN, after a search, will not display the notes in any coherent order. (I also use family-tree-generating software, but these are more miscellaneous notes that don’t fit well into a family-tree program.) At the moment, in EN, if I want to search for the major notes dealing with one particular person, it’s tricky. I have an EN notebook devoted to notes about family history. EN (the Windows version, at least) has recently introduced internote linking, and lately I’ve been doing some experiments to see whether that feature can be made to replace, at least in part, a hierarchical tree. Just a few more thoughts about the troubling non-hierarchical aspect of Evernote.











Evernote windows tag categories versus tag hierarchies