Update detail

Preview Markdown more clearly on desktop and mobile

2026-06-22

Markdown preview now handles richer formatting and gives you a smoother full-screen reading flow on mobile browsers.

  1. Open Create or Manage and choose the Markdown file you want to review.
  2. Use preview mode to check tables, lists, quotes, code blocks, links, and images in one place.
  3. Open full-screen preview when you want fewer distractions while reading on a phone or tablet.
  4. Switch back to editing when you spot something to improve, then save the file from the same workspace.

Markdown files often grow beyond simple headings and paragraphs. A useful note can include checklists, tables, quotes, code snippets, links, images, and small formatting details that make the document easier to scan later.

This update makes preview a better place to review those details before you save or share a file. You can write naturally, then open preview to confirm that the structure of the document matches what you intended.

The reading experience also works better on mobile browsers. When you want to focus on the document, full-screen preview gives the file more room so you can read through longer notes without the editing workspace competing for attention.

A simple review routine

Start by writing the note in the editor as usual. Add headings to divide the main sections, use lists for steps, and use tables when comparing plans, dates, or small sets of values. If the note includes examples, place them in code blocks so they stay visually separate from the surrounding text.

After writing, switch to preview and scan the document from top to bottom. Look for tables that need clearer headings, checklists that should be grouped, and links that need more descriptive text. On mobile, use full-screen preview when the file is long enough that you want a focused reading pass.

Best fit

This helps when your Markdown files are more than plain notes. It is useful for project plans, release checklists, documentation drafts, learning notes, meeting summaries, and any private file where formatting makes the content easier to understand later.

Use it well

Turn this update into a smoother Markdown habit.

Try the improvement with one active file before changing your whole routine. Open a note you already use, follow the steps above, and notice where the workflow feels faster, clearer, or easier to repeat. Small changes are easier to keep when they solve a real task you already have.

After the first pass, apply the same approach to related notes, drafts, or project files. Keep names clear, remove anything that no longer belongs in your active workspace, and return to the update whenever you need a quick reminder of the best way to use the feature.