Meet Letterspace, Our New Favorite Note-taking App For iPhone

February 03, 2015

If you've ever used the iPhone's default note-taking app before, you know it suffers from one major issue: organization.

Letterspace wants to solve that problem, and it's betting the solution is organizing notes with hashtags.

Letterspace is hardly the first note-taking app to use hashtags. Apps like Fetchnotes, Hashnote, and Simplenote have all used them as an organizational system before, but Letterspace manages to stand out from the pack with a beautiful design, with a spare interface and a unique swipe bar that makes scrolling through notes easier.

The swipe bar rests just above the keyboard, and it's actually pretty handy for moving around a paragraph without moving your hands away from the keyboard. I used my thumb on the swipe bar most of the time, and I discovered you can navigate in all directions (like a normal mouse cursor) as long as you start with your finger on the bar. If you need to highlight a selection, you can just double tap the swipe bar.

To make finding the hashtag key a little easier, Letterspace included a hashtag key directly beneath the swipe bar, along with a hyphen and asterisk key. Since the point of using Letterspace is to make your notes more organized and easier to search, it's a welcome addition that doesn't get in the way.

Letterpress also uses Markdown syntax, which is basically a web language for writing on the web that preserves the structure of your document. This means you can create to-do lists by typing in a hyphen followed by a set of brackets, which then lets you check off tasks with an "x."

You can easily change the font to something that's more your style, and while the app's default background is a stark white color that can be a bit bright on the eyes, other color schemes are available. You can test them out for a short period of time, and you can buy them within the app for $1.99 to $4.99. My favorite was the Sepia Green color scheme, which kept text legible but turned the background to a softer, parchment-like sepia tone.

(Business Insider)