![]() These keys are customizable (all you do is type the symbols into a text box in the settings), but the default set is pretty good, with tab, a hyphen, colon, semicolon, parentheses single and double quotes, along with a pair of cursor arrows. This puts another row of keys above the standard QWERTY layout. ![]() The other big change is the Extended Keyboard. The small default font of PlainText was one of the things that kept me from using it. Size, font and even line spacing can now be tweaked. The biggest changes are the ability to change the typeface. In fact, WriteRoom 3.0 is more like PlainText 2.0, and that’s a good thing. ![]() Markdown works, for example).Īnd both sport the same clean interface, which can be melted away at the tap of a button leaving just your words and your keyboard. Both versions sync with Dropbox, the iPad’s de facto file system (they can actually be tied to the same folder so you can use either app to edit the same documents), and both support only plain text files (you can specify what kind of plain text documents by entering file extensions when you first connect to Dropbox. WriteRoom 3.0 is a kind of pro version of PlainText, which was Hog Bay developer Jesse Grosjean’s first iPad Text Editor. So it is that Hog Bay software’s WriteRoom has finally hit the tablet, turning swan-like from a rather pointless iPhone app into a beautifully full-featured (universal) iPad app with almost nobody noticing. The waters of the iPad text editor world are so crowded that its easy to miss yet another one slipping from the shore, even it is a big-name app that would normally make a splash.
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