![]() (I’ve submitted all of these issues to the creator so hopefully they’ll get resolved in the near future.)Ĭonclusion: Joplin is the quick and easy solution if you don’t mind losing metadata like tags and timestamps. Bug: includes a blank location tag when there’s no location metadata attached to a note.Converts your note titles to lowercase - an annoyance since Obsidian filenames are used directly in text and lettercase can be meaningful.Use the ‘npx / no install’ method if you go this route. Took me a good hour to troubleshoot to get it working and work around an apparent bug in how the script finds my template file. It’s a command-line utility so much more advanced.And the rest of the metadata might need some post-processing if you want a different format. I used this to generate a front-matter section (see below), though the tags don’t conform to Obsidian’s standard format for frontmatter tags. Template feature for including metadata in the final markdown, including created-at and modified-at timestamps, tags, and lat/lon location.Exported files do retain their last-modified timestamp.Exported files don’t retain their Evernote last-modified timestamp.(Yarle added some extra \ characters but they don’t show up in the rendered Preview.) ![]() Much easier than Yarle because it’s an app.Bear didn’t handle tables and evernote2md included some HTML if I recall. The other two were fine, but didn’t output markdown quite as cleanly. Their markdown output is nearly identical. Joplin and Yarle were the best at properly converting formatting, including tables and web clips. ![]()
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