The sections feature I meet only in Onenote but not in Evernote, gives the application a big plus.
#TAGSPACES TAG LIMIT SOFTWARE#
Your answer to my questions is very appreciated, it means this software is not getting slow if I load it with tons of information and is capable of holding, searching, editing large amount of information.Ĭintanotes has some very useful balanced features such as the tag system, search and sections which make this application an important tool in note taking.
Note-taking is such an important activity of many users, I keep all my important data (photos, user account details, code snippets, todos, various attachments related to notes) in databases of note taking applications. I used many note taking applications such as Evernote, Onenote, MediaWiki, TiddlyWiki, TheBrain (formerly PersonalBrain, mind mapping software), TreeDBNotes, CherryTree, TagSpaces, KNote, Notepad++ and the rest note managers both offline and web-based listed on alternativesto and other websites.
I know Cintanotes in the last couple of years. Max depth of tag hierarchy nesting: ~100 (practical: 10). Max length of tag's name: 100000 chars (practical: 1000 chars) Max number of tags: 4 billion (practical: 10000) Max size of note title: 1 GB (practical 100 KB) Max number of notes in notebook: 4 billion (practical: 100000) Max number of notes in section: 4 billion (practical: 10000)
#TAGSPACES TAG LIMIT PRO#
Max number of section in a notebook: free version - 3, PRO version - 4 billion (practical: 100) Practical limits are the limits at which CN considerably degrades performance of basic operations, but still works. I suppose that theoretical limits are of little interest to you. To recap, we need to differentiate theoretical and practical limits here. This question has been asked in the past, I'll just link to previous answers if I may: I would like to know if Cintanotes has any limitations such as the max number of section in a notebook, max number of notes in a section or notebook, max length of a note, max number of tags per note or notebook or section, max length of the name of a tag, note' title, max depth of tag hierarchy, etc.