- Alfred is ranked 4th while Evernote is ranked 27th. The most important reason people chose Alfred is: Quickly search for files, applications and web services from the same input. Price (Base Program) Free. Price (Powerpack Upgrade, Family License) £29.00.
- Alfred Evernote Snippets. GitHub Gist: instantly share code, notes, and snippets.
- Alfred-evernote-workflow vulnerabilities. Evernote workflow for Alfred 4. View on npm View alfred-evernote-workflow package health on Snyk Advisor. Latest version: 0.9.8: First published: 9 months ago Latest version published: 2 months ago Licenses detected license.
Run the es-token in Alfred app to setup your token.(run es-token YOURTOKEN in alfred) Start searching with the es command (stands for Evernote Search) Play with the other built-in search shortcuts like es-recent and es-todos; Customized Search Shortcut. Create your own search shortcut is simple. Open the Evernote Search workflow config in. Amongst the many workflows created by Alfred users, the Evernote workflow by Carlos A. Sztoltz is one of the best ways to search or browse your Evernote library, as well as create notes and reminders. Find this workflow and more on the Alfred forum.
Last week, we celebrated Alfred’s 4th birthday by giving away licenses and subscriptions for some of our favourite Macs apps. We’ll be featuring these apps over the coming weeks, as well as sharing the best Alfred workflows to make the most of each one. Today, we’re taking a look at Evernote.
I’ve always had a brain like a sieve, so I usually write everything down with the assumption that I’ll otherwise forget it. The issue with this system (or lack thereof) is that all of these paper notes, clippings and text files get jumbled up or lost.
The basic idea of Evernote is simple really; Remember everything by putting it into Evernote then forgetting about it. File these ideas into notebooks, tag them, and even find them based on the location you were in when you made the note. Access your account on your Mac, on your phone or on the web. The nifty thing about Evernote is that the more you use it, the more useful it becomes.
Whether it’s a photo of the “10 year warranty” receipt for a frying pan I’ll otherwise lose next week, or a link to a vintage pattern I want to knit, every scribble goes into Evernote for future reference. That Tetris-themed crochet blanket may never happen, but I’ll know where to find my design ideas if it ever does!
Using Evernote with Alfred Workflows
To keep Evernote at your fingertips, Carlos A. Sztoltz has created a fantastic workflow we’ve been using daily alongside Evernote.
Once you’ve downloaded and installed the workflow, you can search your Evernote content with the keyword “ens“, which searches all notes fields.
Need to add a note note? You can do this without leaving Alfred, with the keyword “enn“. The syntax even allows you to include details of which notebook you want the note to be filed in, or what tag to attach to it.
Find all items by tags with “ens #“.
Alfred Evernote Search
There are many more useful keywords, which you can discover by looking at the handy workflow help notes by typing “en?”
I’ve barely scratched the surface of what Evernote and this particular workflow can do, so I’d love to hear how you use them.
Alfred Evernote
You’ll need the Powerpack to use workflows; You can purchase a license to get started with workflows like this one, and many more great features.