Posted July 05, 2021 by billiam
Here’s another big update that I had planned to be a small update instead. I hope you like features!
Deepdwn now supports persistent document folding.
With this change, you can collapse entire sections of your markdown documents based on heading level.
Any heading ending in ...
(three periods) is considered “folded” and will remain folded, even when the file is saved and reopened again later.
To unfold a heading you can:
...
item...
item#
(Works too fold a heading also!)There are new key shortcuts for this feature as well:
These and all other key shortcuts can be found at https://support.deepdwn.com/docs/guide/shortcuts
Deepdwn now knows when files are changed.
If another application updates a file that Deepdwn knows about, the updated version will be immediately visible in Deepdwn. If files or folders have been added or removed, you’ll see them immediately in the application, without having to rescan your folders. As such, the rescan folders button has been removed when this feature is enabled.
If you have unsaved changes to that file, you’ll be prompted to choose between keeping your changes, accepting the external changes, or saving a copy in order to keep both. If the file has instead been deleted by another application (and you have unsaved changes), the file will be moved to the Drafts filter with your unsaved changes.
File monitoring can be disabled, which will return the rescan folder button, from the new “Advanced” section in preferences.
Here, you’ll also be able to use poll-based file monitoring. This method is less efficient, but may be necessary if your files are stored on a network drive where filesystem events aren’t available.
Synchronized preview scrolling has been revamped, and is now much smoother. Previously, the preview window would jump immediately to top level elements as you scrolled past them in the editor. With this update, the scroll position will be interpolated between these elements as well. Anyway, it’s better now.
Documents can now be pinned the top of the file list panel. Pinned files ignore folder/category/tag filtering (but not search filtering) so that they’ll always be visible.
You can either pin files by right-clicking on the file and choosing ‘pin file’ from the context menu, or you can add pinned: true
to your document’s metadata.
title: My favorite file
pinned: true
When clicking headings in the outline view to jump to that position in the editor, the heading will now be highlighted for a moment in the editor.
-> <-
now uses paragraph tag instead of div in preview.