{"package_name":"barilyuk.texetescribe","name":"﻿TeXeTeScribe","summary":"Read and write in text-based files: TXT, JSON, HTML, CSV, XML, YAML, INI, MD","category":"Text Editor","icon_url":"/api/icon/barilyuk.texetescribe","latest_version_code":3,"latest_version_name":"1.2","apk_url":"/api/apk/barilyuk.texetescribe","apk_size":4670946,"apk_sha256":"e15aca36b73f13c33cceec9415b833dedf94b3d304a89c8ba5d4b4ed2d33a658","source_kind":"fdroid-repo","repo_slug":"fdroid-main","last_updated":1779371402,"release_timestamp":1779269682,"description":"TeXeTeScribe provides what default Android lacks: read and edit text-based files. It also implements concept of a folder with a notebook functionality.\n\n📖 You data is always readable. If a platform can display characters, it can handle a TXT file: Android, iOS, Windows, Linux, macOS, ChromeOS, Smart TVs, e-readers, gaming consoles, embedded and IoT devices, cloud storage and collaboration tools (Google Drive, iCloud, Dropbox, etc). TXT files are the most universal format because every operating system \"understands\" them. Text files avoid compatibility issues of proprietary formats, ensuring flawless transfer across devices and platforms.\n\n🛡 Future proof your content. Text files are universal and future-proof, free from the compatibility problems that plague proprietary note formats. You don't need a specific app to access TXT file. It can be viewed and edited on basically everything with a processor.\n\n🔓 Notes  in TXT files never get trapped. Most note-taking apps store data inside private app databases or proprietary cloud formats. If the app stops working from a bad update or glitch, or disappears from the app store, your notes often go with it. Unreadable, unexportable, and locked behind a backup you cannot open. Plain .txt files avoid all of that.\n\n💾 Notes survive phone failures. When data is stored in internal memory, Android encrypts it by default, starting 2015. If the system glitches after an update, or the phone can't run its OS, all data in phone's internal memory becomes unaccessible, and basically lost - often Android repair process implies wiping all data. Saving notes on a microSD card keeps them physically separate from the system. Just insert SD card into any other device: files stay fully accessible in any file manager.\n\n🔠 Text always looks readable. Every text file has its own encoding. Android uses UTF-8 by default, Windows often saves text in ANSI (Windows-1251), old DOS programs use CP866, and classic macOS systems relied on MacRoman. There is al","categories":["Text Editor"]}