nvALT

A new app is coming to replace nvALT, code named nvUltra.

Here’s a great introduction to nvALT in French.

nvALT 2 is a fork of the original Notational Velocity with some additional features and interface modifications, including MultiMarkdown functionality. It has been developed by Elastic Threads (David Halter) and Brett Terpstra, and made available for free (donations accepted).

Please report issues on GitHub, not on Twitter or via email. It helps keep everything manageable and avoids us having to answer the same questions in a hundred different tweets and messages. Along the same lines, please take a look at existing tickets before starting a new one.

Enjoying nvALT?

What it is

Notational Velocity is a way to take notes quickly and effortlessly using just your keyboard. You press a shortcut to bring up the window and just start typing. It will begin searching existing notes, filtering them as you type. You can use ⌘-J and ⌘-K to move through the list. Enter selects and begins editing. If you’re creating a new note, you just type a unique title and press enter to move the cursor into a blank edit area. Check out the descriptions at notational.net for a more eloquent synopsis.

Want a great primer on using nvALT? See Michael Schechter’s nvALT 101.

Notational Velocity Features

Option for horizontal layout with multi-line previews in notes list

Words between [[double-brackets]] will become links to other notes

Tags are synced to Dropbox and searched by Spotlight, via OpenMeta

Tags are auto-completed while typing in the tag-entry field

TaskPaper-compatible strikethrough formatting using the “@done” tag

Fully plain-text-based automatic list-bullet formatting

Note-titles inside double-brackets are (optionally) auto-completed

“Show in Finder” command for revealing selected note-files on disk

Highlighting of search terms can be disabled

Dragging the divider to the top or left of the window will hide search field

and more http://notational.net/releasenotes/release2/

Open in external text editor

nvALT Additional Features

NEW: Auto-pairing and selection wrapping for brackets and quotes ([],(),””,’’)

Auto-pairing and selection wrapping for brackets and quotes ([],(),””,’’) NEW: Pin a note to the preview while editing other notes

Pin a note to the preview while editing other notes NEW: Shortcut (CMD-Shift-L) for inserting [[Links]]

Shortcut (CMD-Shift-L) for inserting [[Links]] NEW: Better MultiMarkdown 3 support (if installed locally)

Better MultiMarkdown 3 support (if installed locally) NEW: Right to Left support

Right to Left support NEW: External editor support improved

External editor support improved NEW: Simplenote Tag sync

Simplenote Tag sync Textile and (Multi)Markdown support with Preview window (hold down Control to view temporarily)

HTML source code tab in the Preview window for fast copy/paste to blogs, etc.

Unique interface design changes

Customizable HTML and CSS files for the Preview window

Social note sharing via Peggd

Convert imported URLs to Markdown, and optionally strip excess content with Readability

Multi-note tagging with autocompletion

Full-screen mode (requires OS X 10.5 or higher)

Optional menubar and menubar-only modes

Color schemes Black/White Low-contrast User customizable

Collapse/Expand notes list and search field

Improved readability with optional width limit and margins

Really cool scrollbars

Word Count (hold down Option to view temporarily)

Working localizations (French, German, Portuguese)

Installation

Just download the file, double-click to unzip, then drag to your Applications folder.

If you’ve been using the original (or another fork of) Notational Velocity, you can install nvALT (which has the same application name) alongside the original application. nvALT uses its own preference file and database as of version 2.0. Previous users of Notational Velocity or nvALT will be greeted with the default settings when they first launch 2.0, and will need to set up preferences for color, sync, etc. again.

If you have a custom version of MultiMarkdown installed in ~/Library/Application Support/MultiMarkdown, nvALT will use it. If you don’t, it will just use its bundled version. No problem!

Customization

After the first time you run the Preview window, look in ~/Library/Application Support/Notational Velocity and you’ll find two files: template.html and custom.css . If you’re handy with HTML and CSS, feel free to customize these in whatever way you like. You can add Javascript as well, but you’ll need to load external scripts from a url or using a full file:// path. If worse comes to worst, you can just delete or rename your customizations and the default files will be put back in place automatically.

PPC/Tiger support

Note: Apparently our build is not particularly PowerPC compatible. Since we don’t have PPC machines to test on, it’s difficult to provide compatibility for them. We’ll do our best. In the meantime, it’s probably best for PPC users to hold off or use this experimentally only.

If you tried v2.1 and found yourself up a creek, here’s the 2.0 download link.

Help/Support

Please file any and all issues, questions, feature requests and suggestions in the GitHub issue tracker. We will respond to tickets as soon as we are able.

Download

See the announcement post for more details on the current version (2.2b).

nvALT has its own update stream, so running Check for Updates from the application menu will give you updates only for this fork.

A new app is coming to replace nvALT, code named nvUltra.

Browser Extensions

For Safari and Chrome, browser extensions are available at Elastic Thread’s website. Clip selected link, text or entire page directly to nvALT, with optional use of Instapaper Mobilizer.

Also, an all-purpose bookmarklet by Alex Popescu brings some clipping goodness to everyone, including Firefox Users. Grab it at his site.

Source code

Source code for nvALT is currently available on GitHub. Bleeding edge features are developed in branches, but master is quite likely to be buggy, too. That’s how we roll.

Additional Credits

Notational Velocity

Code: The original Notational Velocity source code by Zachary Schneirov

Code: DivineDominion’s MultiMarkdown fork