Found something interesting and want to save it for future reference? You could save the web page, or copy the content and save it in Notepad, or a cloud-based note taking service. But if you would like to save the note directly in Firefox, you'll probably like the TextNotes extension.
Before you get your hopes up and think this is an add-on that saves notes to specific tabs, let me tell you that it doesn't.
Click on the extension's button on the toolbar and a new tab opens. This is TextNotes' interface, and the page is divided into two panes. The one on the left is the tree panel which lists the notes that you have added, select a note and its contents will appear on the right pane.
Well, there is no note available to begin with, so let's add one. Click the + button above the tree and a new blank note is created. Place the cursor in the right pane and type away. TextNotes will automatically save the note. Where does it save it? The extension does not rely on cloud services, as I hinted earlier it is an offline add-on. Your notes are saved directly in your browser's storage (in your current profile).
There is another way that you can create new notes. Select some text on a web page, access the right-click menu, and choose the option that says "Add Selected Text to TextNotes". This creates a new note which contains the text, but it doesn't include the title or the URL of the tab/page that the content was saved from.
You can open TextNotes with a hotkey; Ctrl + Alt + O. Don't want to open it in a new tab? Use Ctrl + Alt + P, or click the toolbar button while holding the Ctrl key, to open the interface in a new window.
The hotkeys can be changed from Firefox's add-ons page: Add-ons > Manage Extension Shortcuts > TextNotes.
You can trash notes, and the deleted notes are stored in the add-on's built-in trash bin, from where they can be recovered instantly if required. Drag and drop notes to rearrange their order. Right-click on the sidebar to create a new note, add a separator to manage a collection of notes or to delete a note.
TextNotes has a feature called hyperclicks, which are clickable hyperlinks or URLS, paste the link in a note, and you're good to go. To use a saved link, hold the Ctrl key and the left mouse button for a few seconds, that's a Ctrl + long-click. This action opens the link in a new tab in the foreground. To open it in a background tab, make sure that Caps Lock is enabled while you Ctrl + long-click.
Since TextNotes does not support cloud-based synchronization of its own, you will have to rely on Firefox sync. But, in order to prevent loss of data, you may want to save your notes manually. Click on the three-dot icon in the top right corner of the add-on's interface. Select Preferences and a pop-up window appears with 3 options. Hit the Save button to store your notes as a TN (compressed document) file. Or you can save the content directly to a plain-text file, which you can open with Notepad or any text editor of your choice.
The TN document is useful if you want to Load (import) it back to TextNotes. If you want cloud-support, you can save this file to your online storage account, as a backup. The add-on's menu also has a Help file which explains how TextNotes works.
TextNotes is an open source extension.
Thank you for being a Ghacks reader. The post Write notes in a new tab and save them locally with the TextNotes extension for Firefox appeared first on gHacks Technology News.
https://ift.tt/39CNQYR
from gHacks Technology News https://ift.tt/3cwwVcC
No comments:
Post a Comment