![]() ![]() This makes working with it tremendously more pleasurable for me, and enables me to make great music without putting on my music theory hat too deeply (as I don't have scales memorized, nor their patterns, though I know the emotional landscapes of the various common scales very well).Įven if you use Ableton as your essential workflow suite, I still recommend picking up the Mac version of KORG Gadget, as it makes all the built–in synthesizers/samplers available as VSTs - and they are of extremely high quality and repute. It goes without saying, but Korg GADGET works great with the Apple Pencil. Notability is the best iPad app for hand-written notes. It doesn't transcribe them, it just does a superb job at capturing them smoothly and instantly, has reasonably constraining (in a good way) organizing capabilities, and has excellent excellent support for the Apple Pencil. Editors: Textastic, Koder, DraftCode Cloud Drives: Google, Dropbox Keyboards: iOS standard, Swype, Blink. ![]() There is also a Mac client available, which allows you to access your notes from your MacOS machines. Cloud Drives: in iOS land Dropbox is generally supported as a native drive by all the editors Ive looked at apart from DraftCode, which doesnt really support the cloud at all. Unfortunately for me (Im an Apps for Business customer. To interact with Git repositories, I utilize the excellent Working Copy app, which supports the new Files app API for exposing your git repos to other applications, such as and editor like… This is where things get a little bit tricky… coding on the iPad is quite possible-pleasurable even-but running your code is a different story. ![]() This is the best code editor that I've found for iOS, and I've tried them all. It supports editing files from the new Files API, has great code hilighting, and is the closest thing I've found to a Sublime Text experience for the iPad. ![]()
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