www.thefrugalgamer.net/blog/2026/01/22/questionnaire-plain-text/
#blog #blogger #questionnaire #plaintext #plaintextlife #blogpost #whyplaintext
@FrugalGamer Ahh your blog made me smile so wide! Never have I seen a pixel font so cute. This is the kind of autonomous creativity I love.
“ I lost notes once before when switching phones because I went from one manufacturer to another, but will never suffer again now.”
High five. #WhyPlainText
RE: https://pkm.social/@ellane/115918904430809863
The tool I couldn’t do without: Obsidian
I’ve used other markdown tools in the past for my plain text needs but this is the first tool I’ve felt very at home with.
I feel like it can handle the two extremes of just text (not even a sprinkle of markdown) all the way to “technically still a text file but you gotta squint real hard”
I use it to write long and short form content, track books I’ve read, and learn Irish with flashcards. Great stuff.
@ellane here is my take on these questions https://mstempl.netlify.app/post/using-plain-text-files/
This post is in response to Ellane’s invitation to answer eight questions about using plain text files. When did you start using plain text? During my time at university when I started using LaTeX to write my Phd thesis. Why did you start using plain text? Writing math in anything but TeX/LaTeX is a pain and in doing it I started to appreciate distinguishing between content and formatting for an end result.
RE: https://mastodon.social/@aleemshaun/115921386408175076
Is there a plain text tool you can’t do without?
“ In theory, no. That’s the beauty of plain text. But I would be sad if I could no longer use iA Writer or Taskpaper.”
Thanks, Aleem! Great post. #PlainText #WhyPlainText
Ellane offers her responses to Russ Sharek's questions why one uses plain text, and invites others to answer these questions as well. I wish I could say that I considered all these questions (and others) and made a considered decision to move to plain text. It was more gradual and almost accidental than that. But I'm definitely happy I made the move. I explain why on the blog.
Ellane, writing at PTPL 192, explains how and why she lives the plain text life and invites others to do the same. She even provided the questions. Thanks, Ellane. When did you start using plain text? I don’t remember just when I began moving to plain text, but it was sometime in the late 1990s. That’s when I first dipped my toe into running linux; a friend helped me set it up on an old computer so that I could use it as a primitive home server. Why did you start using plain text? The primary motivation was that I was writing what we now call a blog that was published using a rather primitive system that could accommodate only plain text; I gradually began using it more broadly. I lived in two worlds for a couple of decades – I had to stay with the standard word processors alongside plain text before I retired so that I could collaborate with colleagues who were firmly in the proprietary software world. Over time, I discovered ways to migrate both ways between plain text and those other formats. What do you use plain text for? Almost all of my computer work: writing (including journeling and blogging), money management, calendaring, task management. While I was still teaching, I graded and commented on student papers in plain text, exporting my comments to (via LaTeX) pdfs that I gave to students What keeps you using plain text? Nothing much original to say here – the portability of my data, the cleanness of the look, the security of knowing that I’ll continue being able to access data even as the technology changes, the ease of version control that allows me to track what I’m doing from day to day (and undo what I decide shouldn’t have been done (!), even while keeping the abandoned path just in case I want to look at it again). Do you use any markup or formatting languages? If so, which ones and why? I live in emacs generally and, for the most part, org-mode in particular. What are your favourite plain text tools or applications? Emacs (org-mode), Beancount (for plain text accounting), hugo and ox-hugo (for blogging) Is there one tool you can’t do without? Emacs (org-mode). (I should say that I don’t have a dog in the emacs/vim/etc religion wars. I use emacs only because the friend who facilitated my move into linux and plain text years ago used emacs.) Is there anything you can’t do with plain text? I use two non-plain text programs Proton for email. (I compromise here a bit, running proton mail bridge so that I have access to messages locally and can search them using notmuch. But I handle regular reading and writing of emails in the proton app. I ran a local mail server and handled email within emacs for a while but that got too challenging for my somewhat limited tech skills) Once a year, TurboTax. This one grates on me, but it’s either that or pay someone to do our tax return for us.
I cannot answer for @quijote_libre but, for me, org is very much an integral part of my daily working environment, be it for writing prose and code or project and time management. Whether it is a convenience or a necessity is a matter of degrees. I could obviously do everything I'm doing without org but I would find it more jarring, having to mix and match various tools.
The one key feature of org mode is that it is all just text so other tools will be able to access data/information in my org files if need be. I'm not locked in to some vendor...
edit: minor grammar fix
I accepted the invitation from @ellane to answer eight questions about using plain text files. You should too (if you use plain text files).

“If you end up putting your answers to these questions online, use the hashtag #WhyPlainText to keep the movement going. Mention me on Mastodon (@[email protected]), post the link, and I’ll...