Leave a Review Microsoft OneNote
Request for Native Markdown Support and Merged Cell Support in OneNote
OneNote is a powerful note-taking application, but it currently lacks native support for the Markdown format and merged cells in tables. Markdown is a widely used lightweight markup language, and many users would like to be able to use Markdown directly in OneNote without relying on third-party tools. Additionally, support for merging table cells would greatly enhance the functionality of tables in OneNote. I would like to see OneNote add native support for Markdown, allowing users to directly use Markdown syntax in their notes. This would greatly enhance editing efficiency and note readability. Specific features could include, but are not limited to: 1.Real-time rendering of Markdown syntax. 2.Support for importing and exporting Markdown files. 3.Keyboard shortcuts for Markdown syntax. In addition, I request support for merging table cells in OneNote. This would allow for more flexible and complex table structures, which are often necessary for organizing information effectively. These features would greatly benefit developers, writers, and many users who rely on Markdown and advanced table formatting for text editing. I hope the OneNote team will consider these improvements and incorporate them into future updates.Show lessGood for Office 365 but UX is frustrating on every detail
My company blocked Evernote so I had no choice but to switch to OneNote. OneNote has great integration to other apps in Microsoft ecosystem, but every User Experience detail falls short and frustrates me SO MUCH!! Evernote has its own faults (and getting worse), but the overall user experience was well-considered and pretty smooth. OneNote has incredible features and power, but nothing works as well as you expect. For example, when you tap on a notebook group or folder, I expect to see all notes in that group, but it shows notes to one particular notebook in that group. If I want to see notes in a notebook, I will click on that notebook, not a group. And there are too many differences between desktop version and mobile versions. For example, I love the fact that you can turn your note into a task that appears on To Do and Planner apps on desktop, but I cannot do that on iOS version. On iOS, I have to do that completely manually. iOS version can’t even search for tags, which is absolutely crazy. (MS will say you can, but not really.) Please learn a trick or two from Evernotes’ incredible search features. I also hate the fact that I have to change my work flow and behavior for each OS. And the user interaction for every little detail is incredibly frustrating. If I can get the power of OneNote w/ user experience of Evernote, that would be my golden app.Show lessGood for Office 365 but UX is frustrating on every detail
My company blocked Evernote so I had no choice but to switch to OneNote. OneNote has great integration to other apps in Microsoft ecosystem, which I appreciate, but every User Experience detail falls short and frustrates me SO MUCH!! Evernote has its own faults (and getting worse), but the overall user experience was well-considered and pretty smooth. OneNote has so many impressive features and incredible power, but nothing works as well as you expect. For example, when you tap on a notebook group or folder, I expect to see all notes in that group, but it shows notes to one particular notebook in that group. If I want to see notes in a notebook, I will click on that notebook, not a group. And there are too many differences between desktop version and mobile versions. For example, I love the fact that you can turn your note into a task that appears on To Do and Planner apps on desktop, but I cannot do that on iOS version. On iOS, I have to do that completely manually. I hate the fact that I have to change my work flow and behavior for each OS. And the user interaction for every little detail is just not very smooth and refined. If I can get the power of OneNote w/ user experience of Evernote, that would be my golden app.Show less