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Quick Capture, Part 2: nvALT

Screenshot 2014-05-30 07.07.04

Last week, I introduced you to the importance of capture and how it relates specifically to the GTD methodology (although the concept of quick capture is really universal and can be applied to any productivity system you choose to employ, including the Agile Results) methodology we’ve blogged about before. In this post, I want to show you how to quick capture on your Mac using a great little program called “nvALT”.

You can watch the screencast which has step-by-step instruction on how to set up nvALT or you can read along with the text underneath the screencast.

For a long time, not knowing where to quick capture on my Mac was a big hole in my productivity system because I’m on my Mac almost all day, every day. For awhile, I thought that since I was already at my computer I didn’t need to to have a quick capture inbox since every place I may decide to put this information is already accessible from my Mac.

What I discovered though is that while the actual process of taking my information and putting into OmniFocus or Evernote or other appropriate application doesn’t take more than a few seconds, making the initial decisions about where things should go required significantly more effort. When the phone is ringing and clients are clamoring for your attention, it’s easy to just not do anything with that information if you can’t make that split-second decision about where it should go. I realized that if I wasn’t 100% sure where I should put something, I ended up not putting it anywhere. As my day got increasingly more busy and hectic, my threshold for decision-making kept getting lower and more and more I found things slipping through the cracks.

Enter nvALT.

nvALT is a lightweight program for capturing created by Brett Terpstra. You can get it for free from his website. There are 3 very important things that nvALT is very good at:

  1. Quick access to data-entry
  2. Markdown support
  3. Lightning-fast search

These 3 key features make nvALT a very adaptable part of ANY workflow.

When you first launch nvALT, it looks like this:

The nvALT launch screen

Just a blank slate, ready to capture. To create a new note, start typing your note title into the “Search” bar and hit “Enter” to create a new note file. This will create a new note with the title and take you down to the “Editor” pane where you can continue to type and flesh out your note.

What a completed note in nvALT looks like

Once you have notes entered into nvALT, you can also find them quickly using the powerful search feature. To search, just start typing in the “Search” field and you’ll see nvALT will instantly return search results. nvALT will search both titles and the contents of your notes, and it’s lightning-fast – the fastest search I’ve ever seen.

Search in nvALT is incredibly powerful & fast

This search capability is very important for our GTD workflow. Once you find what you’re looking for, you can clarify that information (process what it means) and organize it (put it where it belongs), steps 2 and 3 in the GTD methodology we discussed last week:

  1. Capture – collect what has your attention
  2. Clarify – process what it means
  3. Organize – put it where it belongs
  4. Reflect – review frequently
  5. Engage – simply do

That is nvALT in a nutshell – it’s very fast and very simple, making it the perfect quick capture tool for Mac. I do want to show you how to make a couple tweaks to nvALT though that can make it even more powerful and easier to use.

Tweak #1: Establish a Hotkey

A “hotkey” is a keyboard combination you can use to open nvALT without using your mouse – it opens ready to capture. I use another piece of Brett Terpstra trickery to remap my Caps Lock key so that instead of turning on Caps Lock (which I never use) it simulate a key press of Shift + Control + Option + Command. The reason I do this is because I can now use my Caps Lock key to make simple keyboard shortcuts (like Caps Lock + N, which is really Shift + Control + Option + Command + N) that aren’t duplicated by anything else in my system.

Know your hotkeys

You don’t have to go crazy like I did, but you do need a hotkey combination that opens up nvALT to so you can quick capture information easily.

Tweak #2: Set up Sync

By syncing your nvALT notes via Dropbox, you can make them accessible to other programs. The more you can streamline your workflow like this, the better – then you don’t have to worry about where you put what. I store my nvALT notes in a Dropbox folder called “Notes” and I access that same folder using an app called “Notesy” for iOS. This is useful for when I quick capture information that I want to flesh out later, like an idea for a blog post. I can quick capture the blog idea into nvALT, then if I’m inspired on the go I can add to the note using Notesy on my iPhone or iPad.

You can sync nvALT through any Dropbox subfolder

To sync, you also need to make sure you set change “Store and read notes on disk as” from “Single Database” to “Plain Text Files”.

Tweak #3: Use an External Editor

nvALT is great for quick capturing bits of information, but it’s not great for doing long-form writing or editing (even though it does support Markdown). Fortunately, it’s very easy to switch from editing in nvALT to editing in your favorite text editor. I happen to like Byword because it has beautiful typography, great Markdown support, sync via Dropbox or iCloud is rock solid, and it allows you to publish straight from the app (in-app purchase required).

Open a note in an external editor by hitting “Shift + Command + E”

Once you select which program you want to use as your external editor, just select the note in nvALT you want to edit and hit Shift + Command + E. This will open the note in your external text editor, and if you’re syncing your files via Dropbox all your changes will be synced when you save the file.

So that’s how I use nvALT on my Mac. Next week I’ll show you how to use a great iOS utility called Drafts to quick capture on the go, and in Part 4 I’ll show you how to set up nvALT and Drafts so you can quick capture on iOS and get those notes into nvALT on your Mac.

Update: Click here for Part 3 on Capturing with Drafts.

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