AmI the only Joplin user with problems knowing in which mode I am?
I almost never know if I'm in Markdown editor, WYSIWYG editor, viewer ... and then guessing with clicking and trying writing on icons (for changing mode or/and layout). This really isn't user-friendly. I've been using Joplin for over three years and still have daily problems with this.
The current state should be much more visible/understandable.
Besides that, I often have problems with pasting an image. I'm not sure yet (still following the exact problem), but I think the problem is when an image is COPY in MS Office programs (Word for example).
PASTE in Paint (for example) works, but it doesn't work in Joplin. This must be a bug. In combination with above-described differentiation problem, this leads to a lot of swearwords.
@kacnje
I assume we are talking about Joplin on a desktop. If that is true ...
a) I agree with your observation, but
b) looking at the icon in the top right (showing an M and a pad with a stylus) you can tell in which mode you are.
If I have focus (cursor) after the first screenshot, I can write. I'm somehow in the viewer. And then I'm confused and start clicking icons until I get what I want. It really isn't understandable. I talked with some of my friends (experienced in IT) and they also have a problem understanding this behavior.
Thanks.
I tried your suggestion for toggling between different layouts. But I'm still confused. I never know in which layout I am. I understand that Joplin has 2 editors (the WYSIWYG editor and the Markdown editor). As far as I found, the Markdown editor user can toggle between the editor, the viewer, and the split view. The WYSIWYG doesn't have the same behavior?
After testing, I changed the layout button sequence to "Editor/Split View". It looks the best for me so far.
So, if I'm in WYSIWYG mode, the "toggle editor layout" icon will stay gray. If I'm in Markdown mode, the "toggle editor layout" icon will be available and I can use split view to help writing in Markdown.
I hope it will work the same on my home computer where the Linux Mint rules the world.
Copy/paste an image:
If I copy an image in Word, I can paste it into Gimp, Paint (and other programs). But I can't paste it into Joplin. I don't know what the reason is and who the culprit is. MS Office is otherwise far from my favorite application
There is no point in a WYSIWYG editor to show several different views because the whole idea is that it shows what you type immediately, and the code which adds features (like e.g. bold, paragraph, etc.) is not meant to be (human) readable.
Caution: Basic roles include thousands of permissions across all Google Cloud services. In productionenvironments, do not grant basic roles unless there is no alternative. Instead, grant the mostlimited predefined roles orcustom roles that meet your needs.
The permissions in the Editor role let you create and delete resources for most Google Cloud services. However, the Editor role doesn't contain permissions to perform all actions for all services. For more information about how to check whether a role has the permissions that you need, see Role types.
The Owner role doesn't contain all permissions for all Google Cloud resources. For example, it doesn't contain permissions to modify your Cloud Billing payment information or create IAM deny policies.
Predefined roles give granular access to specific Google Cloud resources.These roles are created and maintained by Google. Google automatically updatestheir permissions as necessary, such as when Google Cloud adds newfeatures or services.
To deploy new versions, a principal must have theService Account User(roles/iam.serviceAccountUser) role on the assigned App Engineservice account, and the Cloud Build Editor(roles/cloudbuild.builds.editor), and Cloud Storage Object Admin(roles/storage.objectAdmin) roles on the project.
To deploy new versions, you must also have theService Account User(roles/iam.serviceAccountUser) role on the assigned App Engineservice account, and the CloudBuild Editor (roles/cloudbuild.builds.editor), and Cloud Storage Object Admin(roles/storage.objectAdmin) roles on the project.
When applied to a dataset, this role provides permissions to list all of the resources in thedataset (such as tables, views, snapshots, models, and routines) and to read their data and metadatawith applicable APIs and in queries.
When applied to a project, this role also provides the ability to run jobs, including queries,within the project. A principal with this role can enumerate their own jobs, cancel their own jobs, andenumerate datasets within a project. Additionally, allows the creation of new datasets within theproject; the creator is granted the BigQuery Data Owner role (roles/bigquery.dataOwner)on these new datasets.
When inviting a person as a collaborator within a folder, you have the ability to set the level of access that person has to your content. Refer to the following chart to review the different permissions that accompany each permission level:
**** Co-owners and editors can move only content contained in the folder they are collaborating on. For example, if a collaborator is invited to Folder A, which contains Folder B and File C, the collaborator can move only Folder B and File C, and cannot move the top-level item.
The account admin must enable these permission levels in the Admin Console, by navigating to Enterprise Settings > Content & Sharing tab and scrolling down to the Collaborating on Content section. These permission levels are also applicable only to folders; collaborators in single files can be granted only Editor or Viewer access levels.
Hi All ,
It's a very common but very tricky question which I am not able to resolved.
Let's say I have 3 Users who are using any Appian Application.
They are added in 3 different groups as mentioned below:
User 1 : Added in Group A having Administrator rights.
User 2 : Added in Group B having Viewer rights.
User 3 : Added in Group C having Editor rights.
All these users doesn't have any Designer rights i.e. they are not added in Appian Designer group.
So , What would be the difference between the role of these 3 Users.
I am not able to get the difference between Administrator, Viewer, Editor rights from End User Perspective who doesn't have Designer Access
If there are any differences , Please list down all .
Hi Stefan ,
But here mostly the difference comes into play when we have designer rights .
But if we don't have designer rights , What are the possible differences which Admin can do and Viewer can't do .
I agree with Mathieu. There are scenarios where admin privileges can be used to manage the application through the end user experience (i.e., a site page), but for the most part the Admin group and role are designed for managing objects in the Appian Designer. There aren't a lot of differences between what they can do and viewers can do if they both have access to a site.
Questions seeking product, service, or learning material recommendations are off-topic because they become outdated quickly and attract opinion-based answers. Instead, describe your situation and the specific problem you're trying to solve. Share your research. Here are a few suggestions on how to properly ask this type of question.
I'm a big user of wikis, mainly Dokuwiki, I really like the clarity and ease of use of simple text files. However all good wikis seem to require a web-server of some kind; has anyone come across a good desktop wiki editor/viewer that work with plain-text files, and allow me to work with wiki text files just like any other document file type (note: not a desktop wiki running inside a local webserver)
But it's not just a wiki! It has very powerful plugin capabilities, so it can also be used to build new tools. You have full control over how it looks and behaves. For example, TiddlyWiki is already being used as:
If you follow WikidPad development you will soon notice that is not realiable. I would stick to ConnectedText that has all standard wiki features (many missing in WikidPad) and has many extensions not available in other systems.
It is possible to adjust the editor settings so that model files and Verilog-A files are opened for editing with a user-specific editing program, e.g. vim, nedit, emacs etc. The built-in viewer that comes with Virtuoso is really rather limited in its features.
Can the same be done for viewing the netlist or the simulator output log? The best I could imagine was adding these on the model path list but keeping them disabled, but this is a rather inelegant solution, and one would need to do it by hand each time.
For the netlist and simulation logfile, I would imagine that you might need to add a custom menu item or bindkey for opening these with the editor, for example "gvim -R" to invoke it in read-only mode, but still have the features of Vim like syntax highlighting.
I agree with you 100%. I too have already have set my default editor so I can edit Verilog-Afiles, etc. with Nedit, but it drives me crazy that it isn't used when opening read-only and isn't used to display the netlist.
Please do file enh requests. There are quite a few for these already. We are working on improving the view window (it's better in IC615, for example), and with the upcoming text view capabilities, this will get better - but still it's useful to hear.
Sometimes however changing to an external editor may destroy some of the improvements we want to make (e.g. using hypertext type links when appropriate to cross-probe), so it may be better for us to do that than offer use of a custom text editor. Still, there are cases when using a text editor would be useful, and cases where it might not.
Currently on the Team plan with 20 users, of which only 2 need edit permissions.
Only way to have 18 viewers and 2 editors would be to pay 5x more per month (essentially I now have to make an argument why we need to pay considerably more for some users to be able to do less).
Want to add the rest of the company over the next few months, probably another 100 or so people. Still only 2 editors though, no way can I justify the price hike.
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