![]() Upon installation, the user is sent to a refreshingly blank slate, with only a single cursor blinking at the user as if welcoming them to write and get creative. ![]() It’s UI is clean and simple, making the editor extremely intuitive and easy to use. ![]() Typora is a wondeful text editor that suits my minimalistic taste. (Yes, I might have minor obsessive-compulsive disorder, although I highly doubt it given that my actual physical desktop is in a state of chaos most of the time. At the minimum, I use the sort function to make sure that the dekstop’s aesthetics is passable by my standards. I have seen many people who are completely oblivious to the looks of their desktop-a matter of personal preference that I fully respect and understand-but for some inexplicable reason, I cannot stand looking at a desktop with files scattered about here and there. For instance, I always keep my computer’s desktop clean and empty. My odd penchant for minimalism bleeds into many areas of my life, big and small, significant and frivolous. I have always been a fervent supporter of minimalism. However, lately I have realized that for posts that do not require code executions or visualizations, there are far superior options out there, one of which is the editor I am using right now to write this post: Typora. Because many of my posts involve mathematical expressions written in $\LaTeX$ commands as well as code snippets, Jupyter Notebook was a choice that made sense. So far, my default multi-purpose text editor has been Jupyter Notebook. Disclaimer: I was not sponsored by the developers of Typora to write this post, although that would have been great.
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