

- SUPPORTED REGULAR EXPRESSIONS FOR TEXTASTIC FOR MAC
- SUPPORTED REGULAR EXPRESSIONS FOR TEXTASTIC FULL
This is the killer feature that keeps it on my home row.
SUPPORTED REGULAR EXPRESSIONS FOR TEXTASTIC FULL
The look is highly customizable with four themes and from there you can change colours, fonts and sizes.Įven the extra keyboard row is customizable with full macro support, these are real macros with support for cursor positioning not just text substitutions. I don’t think I could recommend Elements unless you want a really simple editor, even then the lack of the extra keyboard row is a drawback.Įlements - A Markdown Text Editor For iOS Nebulous The one good feature not commonly seen is a small scratchpad for taking a quick note while you are editing a document. It does export the HTL of your MarkDown to the clipboard, though it takes a moment to find it – preview the MarkDown and at the bottom of the screen is a “Copy HTML” button. It supports MarkDown syntax with a single button preview.


The export options are limited, the font is fixed, there is no extra keyboard row.
SUPPORTED REGULAR EXPRESSIONS FOR TEXTASTIC FOR MAC
A Simple Text Editor for Mac and iOS ElementsĮlements is the first editor for writers I tried and at first I liked it’s clean look but it lacks a number of features I need.I don’t really use it that much, I’m much more likely to use either Nebulous or Textastic. It has a good range of export possibilities including the ability to copy a HTML conversion to the clipboard and email a number of formats. One neat trick I haven’t seen elsewhere are that the extra row keys include ‘(‘ and ‘[‘ but not the matching close, when you type the opening character the key changes to the matching close.įor file storage it supports both iCloud and Dropbox. The extra keys are optimised for typing Markdown syntax including a key for headings, inserting hyperlinks and creating lists. Like all good editors on the iPad it has an extra row of keys above the standard keyboard. Of course it supports Markdown well, including a good preview. On the Mac Byword is my go to editor for writing, so how does it stack up on the iPad? So here you have them all in the one post.īefore I start if you are already running one or two editors and you’re just looking for a good comparison list of iOS editors to find your perfect one (or you want to check all the features of the four I’ve reviewed below) Brett Terpstra recently crowd sourced the definitive list. I just started to write a few words about Byword for iOS and realised that I’ve got a bunch of editors on my iPad and they all deserve a few words.
