![]() ![]() ![]() If you a have tags hierarchies in DEVONthink then you’ll have to figure a way (such as using containers) to represent that hierarchy in Tinderbox.Create a note in Tinderbox and add the “item link” for a single tag from DEVONthink to that note in Tinderbox.If you want to organize your tags using Tinderbox, then you have to create notes with a one-to-one correspondence to your tags in DEVONthink.A note in Tinderbox can point to one thing in DEVONthink – either a tag / group, or a document stored in a tag / group.Tinderbox containers may look or behave somewhat like folders, but they are not folders. But hey are not the same as notes in Tinderbox. Tags and groups (folders) in DEVONthink are the same thing.(If its impossible, i understand that too.) the first one is way more important to me! thanks! If that makes no sense, please ignore the second question. (my impression is that it is possible using agents?) but if i drag an article from DT tagged w/ a, i would like to see the note w/in container a. i’d like to just see a and b linked on a map with some indication (on the outline as well) that b is a’s child. ![]() But what I need help with is this part - can I drag a note into tinderbox and have it automatically become part of the containers that correspond with its tags? is this the best way to do this? I’m writing a book, and the ultimate goal is to see how all the tags relate to each other and which documents fall w/in them as I’m writing.Īnother much less important question - is there a way to see on a map a heirachy of all the tag names w/o using the container view – in other words, not having to open a container to see the children/grandchildren – but still using the individual tags as containers for the articles they include? so if a is the parent to b, i would prefer to not see b w/in container a. just creating a note/container for every tag on my own. I would like to organize them in TB, which I can do manually, e.g. I have read a lot but am still really trying to figure out TB and know basically nothing, so excuse me in advance. When the script is installed, Highlights will ask DEVONthink in the background upon export if the current PDF file is inside a DEVONthink database and if so get a link back that will be used to replace the page links in your notes.Hi, I just started using TB but have a long history with DT. If you click Install DEVONthink script, Highlights will prompt you to install an Apple Script. In other words: clicking on page links in a note exported to DEVONthink will not open the PDF in Highlights, but open the PDF inside DEVONthink and take you to the linked page there. This setting lets Highlights replace page links in your notes with DEVONthink links when exporting. Highlights recognizes #hashtags in your annotation comments as tags and, when exporting as snippets, will apply these tags to the individual annotation files which in turn will show up as tags in DEVONthink:įurthermore, if you store your PDFs in DEVONthink and prefer page links to open there, you can install the DEVONthink script: Install DEVONthink Script Highlights will then save each annotation as an indvidual file inside a folder and export the folder to DEVONthink. for narrower search results), you can enable the Export as folder of files-setting. If you prefer your notes to be split into snippets (e.g. HTML notes will look like the notes you see in Highlights, but we recommend Markdown for notes that should be editable. You can change the file format for the exported notes in the Export preference pane: You can also create your own sorting order for annotations using color categories. If you want to change how Highlights export your annotations, you can change what is included and the appearance of your notes in the note format preference pane: Click the Share iconįor free users of Highlights, PDF will be the only enabled option in the export menu. Your notes contain highlighted text and annotations that have been extracted using specific rules from the PDF. The PDF opens in a window with your notes on the right: Locate and select the file you want to open, then click Open: Open the PDF document in Highlightsįrom the menu bar choose File > Open. You can customize the content, change the file format and even automatically replace page links with DEVONthink links. Highlights extracts highlighted text and other types of annotations from PDFs and lets you export them directly to DEVONthink on your Mac. Not on a Mac? Checkout the iPad and iPhone guides. ![]()
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