Prior to Mountain Lion,
Apple Mail on macOS supported a mailbox containing notes, which was synced with notes in the Notes application in iOS. This situation was a
kludge: as Apple Mail already implemented the
IMAP mailbox synchronization protocol, it could also sync notes with minimal additional work. In Mountain Lion, notes were moved to a separate Notes application. Created notes are synced through all the user's
Apple devices through the
iCloud service. Notes can be arranged in folders and pinned to the user's desktop. When the application is closed, the pinned note still remains. Additionally, unlike the iPad, iPhone, and
iPod touch versions, the OS X Mountain Lion Notes application allows for images to be embedded within notes. Originally, notes could be created in three different default fonts, Noteworthy, Marker Felt, and
Helvetica. Users could also add custom fonts by visiting the "Show Fonts" menu. The menu allows users to change text size, and format lists, choose the alignment (left, center, justify, or right), assign a writing direction, and indent text. Attachments, images, and
hyperlinks can also be added to a note. Attachments cannot be viewed on iOS devices. Due to the proprietary nature of the data storage mechanism for the Apple Notes apps, users of this software may be locked into it without a convenient way to export all Notes data to a different format. While Apple does provide a way to export individual notes as PDF files, the software does not provide a mechanism to export the text of all notes to a text file, a Rich Text File, or other commonly used data file formats as a bulk data transfer. However, advanced users can utilize
AppleScript or
Shortcuts to automate note exports.
OS X El Capitan As of
OS X El Capitan, Notes received a significant functional overhaul (in-line with the
iOS 9 version), with major features including:
iCloud sync, the ability to view
sketches created on the iOS counterpart, advanced
text formatting options, several styles of lists, rich web and
map link previews, support for more file type attachments, a corresponding dedicated attachment browser and a system share extension point for saving web links, images, etc. As of OS X El Capitan 4, individual notes can be password-protected, with the password syncing across compatible devices.
macOS Catalina The new Notes app in
macOS Catalina lets users turn their notes into reminders.
macOS Sonoma With
macOS Sonoma, Notes now lets users create links between notes. == In popular culture ==