Completely agree.
For me, this featue is a real deal breaker.
The way I see it, every node should be like a single document. You should be able to write freely, with no constraints on the formatting within a node. This includes writing multiple lines in a single node, adding a mixture of lines and pictures, etc.
In my opinion, the node heirarchy should be used to express or visualize the relationship between nodes, and should not be a way to format content.
I think that the main problem with current apps, like Obsidian and RoamResearch is that they don't balance well the need for formatting and the need to visualize relationship between nodes in a comfortable way.
Obsidian solves the problem presented here, as every note there can be formatted independently, without forcing the user to split the note into multiple bullet point.
But it lacks the advantage of visualy presenting multiple related notes next to each other on the screen, or presenting one note under another note.
RoamResearch suffers the exact same problem presented in here, and this is the main reason shy I don't use it.
To sum up, this is a really important feature, that will set Tana even further apart from other apps
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Completely agree.
For me, this featue is a real deal breaker.
The way I see it, every node should be like a single document. You should be able to write freely, with no constraints on the formatting within a node. This includes writing multiple lines in a single node, adding a mixture of lines and pictures, etc.
In my opinion, the node heirarchy should be used to express or visualize the relationship between nodes, and should not be a way to format content.
I think that the main problem with current apps, like Obsidian and RoamResearch is that they don't balance well the need for formatting and the need to visualize relationship between nodes in a comfortable way.
Obsidian solves the problem presented here, as every note there can be formatted independently, without forcing the user to split the note into multiple bullet point.
But it lacks the advantage of visualy presenting multiple related notes next to each other on the screen, or presenting one note under another note.
RoamResearch suffers the exact same problem presented in here, and this is the main reason shy I don't use it.
To sum up, this is a really important feature, that will set Tana even further apart from other apps