Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Skip to content

sbusso/Bear-Markdown-Export

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

95 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Markdown export and sync of Bear notes

bear_export_sync.py
Version 1.3.11, 2018-02-11 at 07:43 EST

Python script for export and roundtrip sync of Bear's notes to OneDrive, Dropbox, etc. and edit online with StackEdit, or use a markdown editor like Typora on Windows or a suitable app on Android. Remote edits and new notes get synced back into Bear with this script.

See also: Bear Markdown and textbundle import – with tags from file and folder

Set up seamless syncing with Ulysses’ external folders on Mac, with images included!
Write and add photos in Bear, then reorder, glue, and publish, export, or print with styles in Ulysses—
bears and butterflies are best friends ;)
(PS. The manual order you set for notes in Ulysses' external folder, is maintained during syncs, unless title is changed.)

BEAR IN MIND! This is a free to use version, and please improve or modify as needed. But do be careful! both rsync and shutil.rmtree used here, are powerful commands that can wipe clean a whole folder tree or even your complete HD if paths are set incorrectly! Also, be safe, take a fresh backup of both Bear and your Mac before first run.

See also: Bear Power Pack

Features

  • Bear notes exported as plain Markdown or Textbundles with images.
  • Syncs external edits back to Bear with original image links intact.
  • New external .md files or .textbundles are added.
    (Tags created from sub folder name)
  • Export option: Make nested folders from tags.
    For first tag only, or all tags (duplicates notes)
  • Export option: Include or exclude export of notes with specific tags.
  • Export option: Export as .textbundles with images included.
  • Or as: .md with links to common image repository
  • Export option: Hide tags in HTML comments like: <!-- #mytag --> if hide_tags_in_comment_block = True
  • NEW Hybrid export: .textbundles of notes with images, otherwise regular .md (Makes it easier to browse and edit on other platforms.)
  • NEW Writes log to bear_export_sync_log.txt in BearSyncBackup folder.

Edit your Bear notes online in browser on OneDrive.com. It has a ok editor for plain text/markdown. Or with StackEdit, an amazing online markdown editor that can sync with Dropbox or Google Drive

Read and edit your Bear notes on Windows or Android with any markdown editor of choice. Remote edits or new notes will be synced back into Bear again. Typora works great on Windows, and displays images of text bundles as well.

NOTE! If syncing with Ulysses’ external folders on Mac, remember to edit that folder settings to .textbundle and Inline Links!

Run script manually or add it to a cron job for automatic syncing (every 5 – 15 minutes, or whatever you prefer).
(LaunchD Task Scheduler Is easy to configure and works very well for this)

Syncs external edits back into Bear

Script first checks for external edits in Markdown files or textbundles (previously exported from Bear as described below):

  • It replaces text in original note with bear://x-callback-url/add-text?mode=replace command
    (That way keeping original note ID and creation date)
    If any changes to title, new title will be added just below original title.
    (mode=replace does not replace title)
  • Original note in sqlite database and external edit are both backed up as markdown-files to BearSyncBackup folder before import to bear.
  • If a sync conflict, both original and new version will be in Bear (the new one with a sync conflict message and link to original).
  • New notes created online, are just added to Bear
    (with the bear://x-callback-url/create command)
  • If a textbundle gets new images from an external app, it will be opened and imported as a new note in Bear, with message and link to original note.
    (The subprocess.call(['open', '-a', '/applications/bear.app', bundle]) command is used for this)

Markdown export to Dropbox, OneDrive, or other:

Then exports all notes from Bear's database.sqlite as plain markdown files:

  • Checks modified timestamp on database.sqlite, so exports only when needed.
  • Sets Bear note's modification date on exported markdown files.
  • Appends Bear note's creation date to filename to avoid “title-filename-collisions”
  • Note IDs are included at bottom of markdown files to match original note on sync back:
    {BearID:730A5BD2-0245-4EF7-BE16-A5217468DF0E-33519-0000429ADFD9221A}
    (these ID's are striped off again when synced back into Bear)
  • Uses rsync for copying (from a temp folder), so only changed notes will be synced to Dropbox (or other sync services)
  • rsync also takes care of deleting trashed notes
  • "Hides” tags from being displayed as H1 in other markdown apps by adding period+space in front of first tag on a line:
    . #bear #idea #python
  • Or hide tags in HTML comment blocks like: <!-- #mytag --> if hide_tags_in_comment_block = True
    (these are striped off again when synced back into Bear)
  • Makes subfolders named with first tag in note if make_tag_folders = True
  • Files can now be copied to multiple tag-folders if multi_tags = True
  • Export can now be restricted to a list of spesific tags: limit_export_to_tags = ['bear/github', 'writings']
    or leave list empty for all notes: limit_export_to_tags = []
  • Can export and link to images in common image repository
  • Or export as textbundles with images included

You have Bear on Mac but also want your notes on your Android phone, on Linux or Windows machine at your office. Or you want them available online in a browser from any desktop computer. Here is a solution (or call it workaround) for now, until Bear comes with an online, Windows, or Android solution ;)

Happy syncing! ;)

About

Markdown export from Bear sqlite database

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 100.0%