I love Scivener
Keep Writing
A place for writers to encourage and inspire one another.
Bibisco & Manuskript are popular feature rich options.
Generally if you just want to write your thoughts using something logseq or trilium might be more what you want.
I use google docs. That way, whenver i have a note or phrase to add, i can add it. From phone, laptop, work pc, gaming pc, or my fridge.
Best option. Has made sharing work with friends and getting feedback a lot easier. Despite everyone else's responses, I feel like Google Docs is by far the most popular options, and I don't see a reason why not to use it (besides AI training material... but I'm not sure about that yet)
I stick to strictly Markdown. because it's easier (for me) to convert to eBook, PDF, or website - or all three.
Depending on the platform, I use different Markdown editors. At the moment I'm using Markor on Android and VSCodium on Windows and Linux.
On PC, I use KDE's Kate (it's like the Windows Notepad, no formatting, just a plain text editor). On mobile, I've been testing Notesnook (migrating from Joplin), but sometimes I even use Telegram's message composer to write.
If my writing gets too long and chaptered, then I copy-and-paste inside Google Docs, applying the chapterization.
Most of my writings are short/medium stream-of-consciousness texts (also, they hold a spiritual/esoteric component), so formatting is not a important thing for me to write them down.
However, I'm yet to find a good fediverse platform/instance to publish them. I've been hopping between Mastodon instances. Most of them are limited to 500 characters (as by standard), insufficient for non-short texts. I've been finding instances that allow for more than 500, but they aren't active enough for people to interact with them, nor federated enough for reaching a broader public.
I'm over engineering the heck out of it. My editor is neovim, which I use for work and to write software too. I write markdown, but it's not just markdown.
My stuff is somewhat inspired by the SCP wiki in style, so I'm making it a website with fancy styling via CSS and so on, using Jekyll in the backend.
It's a lot of fun and I keep learning more about web dev stuff, but even though I spend a large part of my day today working on it, I hardly wrote any new content. But I have a fancy fake login form for classified data, nice colors and a search feature now.
Just in case, does anyone know a good markdown editor that with good integration for languagetool, or alternatively one that runs in the browser?
I just use Word, but so many people swear by Scrivener that I think I'm going to check it out.
Scrivener is fantastic for large projects with a lot of moving parts. It lets you keep all of your character sheets, locations, research, notes, etc in one place. It lets you easily move scenes around and will automatically format your manuscript.
Super powerful tool. However, it has a learning curve, and I have definitely used it as a means of procrastination. If you struggle with the habit of actually sitting down to write, maybe stick with Word for a while.
Joplin. It's Markdown based, supporting math, tables, Mermaid diagrams, and more. You can organize notes into notebooks, including sub-notebooks, as well as with tags. The desktop app supports full text seach. And it has open-source apps for desktop and mobile, and it's easy to set up synchronization between all devices using standard cloud storage (I use free Dropbox), which is encrypted whenever it's not on your devices.
Wonder how it compares to obsidian now 🤔
Joplin was on my radar for a bit, but haven't thought much about it since I'm using obsidian.
The paid sync is kind of a rip off IMHO, but the CouchDB local sync works just fine. Plugin ecosystem is probably what gives me the largest number of niche features.
It's all markdown, I push it to a GitHub repo.
Obsidian is the gold standard for notes apps IMO. I don't see any reason to move to Joplin if you're using Obsidian.