- Erasing in drawboard pdf#
- Erasing in drawboard pro#
- Erasing in drawboard professional#
- Erasing in drawboard windows#
Now who knows Apple Pencil, it has two special features, one is that the thickness of the line can be changed by applying different pressure and the other one is that if you tilt the angle and use the "sides" of the tip, it gives a stroke similar to what you'd see using a normal pencil.
Erasing in drawboard pro#
I am working on my iPad Pro using an Apple Pencil. This is already an old thread but I have to comment here because this is an issue that still - for iOS users (I have not tried other environments) - has NOT been solved.
Erasing in drawboard windows#
Is something equivalent for the Windows desktop version plans or ever has in mind ? I need practical advice on how I could solve by other apps by this problem. The iOS version has indeed integrated drawing function and Penultimate. Evernote Touch offers grotesquely no (Surface ) Pen support. However, unfortunately, very important aspect bothers me tremendously and drove me almost to Onenote : noting the miserable ways handwritten or draw in the Windows version of Evernote. I work for half a year with a Surface Pro 4 and do not want to miss it.
Erasing in drawboard professional#
I 've been a few years of intensive Evernote users in the private and professional spheres. I like Evernote but it's not well integreated with the Surface.Ĭonsidering the Surface (and surface-alike systems) are the new "cool" Laptop you should consider adding pen support. I also can snap images and move them around with my finger. I can scribble down thoughts using the typecover or pen - whatever feels natural. But if you have closed Evernote in between, it will save the changes to the harddrive only) (As long as you haven't closed Evernote, you can actually just open up Drawboard again without finding the note in Evernote first, as it will show up directly when you open Drawboard.
Erasing in drawboard pdf#
It will immediatly show the changes in the Evernote note.Īfter you have closed Drawboard PDF you just open the file to make additional changes by double clicking the preview in Evernote once again. To save your handwriting to Evernote, you just tap the hamburger menu and the save icon. (You won't be dissapointed even if you are using it just for PDF viewing, as it is much better than Acrobat Reader, Foxit, you name it)ĭouble click on the empty pdf in Evernote, and it will open in Drawboard PDF. Install Drawboard PDF from the store if you haven't got it. This note will be used as a template for new handwritten notes, by having copies ready for new notes.ģ. Create a new note in Evernote, and attach the PDF file so that it shows a preview of the empty document. Open Microsoft Word and create an empty PDF with 1 or several empty pages, by using the "Export" function from the "File" menu.Ģ. It also let's you use the eraser on the back of a Surface Pen, and like OneNote it "remembers" single operations even after you have saved the note to Evernote, so that you can still delete a seperate pen line by just one eraser touch, even several days later.ġ. It involves using the Windows Store app Drawboard PDF, which actually is an awesome PDF viewer and annotation app for touch devices, with a lot of "hidden" features like instant touch access to multiple customizeable pen colors/sizes etc. I have a great workaround going, which clearly rivals OneNote (except for the unlimited drawing space in OneNote, which doesn't go well with Evernote). Even something to take handwritten notes in onenote and import them automatically to Evernote. This will also let you open up Sketchpad directly with that single click on the pen even if your Surface is in hibernation. If you have a Microsoft Surface, it's even faster if you configure the pen eraser button to open Sketchpad with just a click on the pen. Long press (right click) on the Evernote icon in the taskbar and pick "Paste clipboard". After you have drawn/written what you want in Sketchpad, you press the copy button (in between the save button and share button) and then close Sketchpad. But If you only want to make some quick notes or drawings in Evernote there is an even faster way with less clicks than yours:Ĭlick on the pen (Windows Ink) next to the clock at the far right of the Windows taskbar. Like mentioned above, this isn't really helpful if you want to pick up where you left of at some later time. I have a nice workaround too.since i am on windows i have the snipping tool pinned to taskbar so whenever i wanna draw i just go down to clear space in my notes on evernote and select a rectangular snip of blank space in the notes and then i can use the pen in the snipping tool to draw freely.when i am finished i can then right click and copy to evernote in no time at all.I attached screenshots