![]() That means with Hook you can navigate between a file opened in Marked 2 and all kinds of other apps. Of course, with Hook you can link Markdown files to just about anything (files, emails, web pages, Agenda Notes, OmniFocus or Things tasks, etc.). This is rather “meta”, and thus illustrative of Hook’s pre-launch code name, “myMeta” (the my* being analogous to our other app mySleepButton) :). Whether you open a Markdown file in Marked 2 or your Markdown editor (e.g., BBEdit or Sublime Text), you will see the same links. “in the context of” means: when the file is open in an app, or selected in a “container” app like Finder, DEVONthink, Evernote, or EagleFiler. Thereafter, when you invoke Hook on either file, whether it is in Marked 2, the Finder, or some other adequately scriptable app, like Sublime Text or BBEdit, you will see its associate. However, when a document is loaded in Marked 2, you can use Hook’s “Link to New” command to link the current Markdown file (say foo.txt) to something else (e.g., bar.txt). Therefore, in the “Link to New” menu of Hook you will not find an entry for Marked 2. Marked 2 is a Markdown previewer, not a composer. It was gratifying to find that Hook works very well with such apps. They are both particularly interesting to write about in relation to Hook because they are both quite innovative apps. ![]() So, of course, Marked 2 and nvALT were two of the first apps with which I tested Hook. ![]() (I described the latter in both my Cognitive Productivity books). I use nvALT on a daily basis to write notes on my Mac that sync on iOS. I use Marked 2 to preview every significant document I write in Markdown - including my blog posts. And Markdown apps like Marked 2 and nvALT, both by Brett Terpstra, supercharge my Markdown workflows. ![]()
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