7/1/2023 0 Comments Marginnote vs liquid text>Personally, I use PDFExpert to do markup that must be compliant with the I would be sort of following a Grounded Theory approach to the analysis of the literature. I need to see if they can help bring together a lot of different quotes and notes made on different PDFs into themes and concepts. I need to investigate this study sheet approach further in the applications MarginNote (both on macOS and iOS) and LiquidText (iOS only, unfortunately). >I particularly appreciate the approach in MarginNote to be able to put >without having to export the annotations to other apps. >study sheet approach, will provide a framework that you can use directly >You may find that MarginNote (or LiquidText), with their additional In my search for an application for the iPad I came across Flexcil. They do not to be compliant with other PDF editors as such, but I need the highlights and notes I made in the application export to another application. But their weakness comes from the point you raised about them not being compliant with other PDF editors. >that the annotations they create are not always compliant with other PDFĪt first, I was excited by the features of these two applications. ![]() >side sheet and organize them for review. >They include their own internal options to extract the annotations to a >Going further, you will find apps such as LiquidText and MarginNote. In this regard, your suggestion of LiquidText and MarginNote seems inline with my needs. PDFExpert and PDFPen do not have this extra window with the notes appearing as little icon images on the PDF which you have to click to read what they are. These notes are linked to the PDF itself and can be imported into other applications. In terms of using a PDF editor in my workflow, I am after something similar to Highlights where the highlights and notes appear as text and images in a window to the side of the PDF. I now have PDFExpert as my general default PDF reader! :) >believe that both have been given high regards on this forum.Īctually, it was reading the recommendations in this forum that had me trying out PDFExpert on my iMac, MacBookAir and iPad. ![]() >expand the tool sets to the iPad with additional markup options. >At one level, you will find apps such as PDFExpert and PDFPen. Nothing else I have seen comes close to Citavi. There is also a built-in task manager which allows organization of the many details and tasks implicit in academic work.Įven if someone never ends up using Citavi, its website offers Information which may be useful. Its ability to manage knowledge is unique, and could mimic effectively the research journal, while allowing information to be organized usefully. Academic Workflow - Any Suggestion for an Application/s?Īlthough only available in the Windows world, Citavi is probably the best ref manager, pdf reader, and knowledge manager on the market.
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