![]() ![]() I installed the Advanced Table plugin which is just a lovely little sweetener for easily making Multimarkdown tables that always look good and behave more like spreadsheets. I like to see how many octothorpes I’ve entered because sometimes the font size isn’t obvious. I also don’t really care for how the header octothorpes are in a smaller font than the main body text. I’m sure I just haven’t found the right plugin or theme to override this decision. ![]() There’s no reason for this other than to simulate the limitations of physical typesetting. My main gripe about the syntax in Obsidian is that I don’t really like how footnotes are displayed in a tiny font. It’s not terrible but it reminds me that even advanced technologies have anchors in the past. In Obsidian I need to switch modes to see the images. After months with the Craft app I started to appreciate seeing the images inline while I take notes. I’m a little exhausted by the modal Markdown editing vs. There are some opinionated decisions but nearly everything can be overridden with a different theme or custom CSS. Obsidian supports all of the Markdown features I use and it does the right thing almost all of the time. I also think that some of these plugins should be turned on by default. I’d like to see better plugin documentation and guides for initial setup. By installing a few plugins I’ve got what I need but I also have more than I want. The Obsidian app without plugins is not very good for me. Total number of downloads does not translate into “good” or “bad”. ![]() I appreciate that the community plugin browser in Obsidian displays the total number of downloads, but I’d like to see some sort of rating system too. The documentation and quality control of Obsidian plugins is pretty limited. #MACWISE SETTINGS WINDOWS#I’ve also observed some strange UI performance where windows scroll unpredictably when changing focus. I had a conflict between two plugins that caused Markdown links to be incorrectly formatted. The downside to all of this diversity is that there are occasional plugin conflicts and weird application behavior. Do you want split panes to stack up instead of sit side by side? Yep, plugin. ![]() #MACWISE SETTINGS PDF#Do you want to extract PDF annotations as notes? There’s a plugin for that. Do you want a calendar based journaling system? There’s a plugin for that. It’s impressive that there are so many robust and complex plugins for Obsidian.
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