Curiously Chase

Testing out writing articles in Coda

An experiment where I write articles in Coda.

Info

**Update (2022-04-09) I've started using Obsidian to publish notes to the web. I am no longer using Coda.

Caution

Update [2019/11/09]: I've found that when pulling data from the API, all rich-text comes across as plain-text without Markdown formatting. I'm getting around that right now by hitting "delete" whenever I type something that auto-formats to rich-text so that it becomes plain-text (that's okay for me right now since I don't care how it displays as I'm writing, it's just an inconvenience). It'd be nice if there was a plain-text column type.

My co-worker and friend Andrew Nelsen introduced me to Coda this week during a 1:1. As he was showing me how he manages his life and work in Coda, the gears in my brain started to turn!

I decided I'd give Coda a shot as a place to write (instead of Dropbox for these reasons):

  • It has powerful tables that make it really easy to keep post meta
  • The data can be viewed in different layouts based on what I want to see
  • It has a solid API for grabbing my posts and generating Markdown files (like I do today with Dropbox)
  • It seems to have a well-thought out offline mode (I tested by going into airplane mode and writing a post)
  • It has the ability to do complex formulas, which means I don't have to have as much custom code to get a markdown file generated well

It took me about 2 hours to create a table with the same data my markdown files have and write a script that pulls and generates markdown files that are published to chaseadams.io from that table. (In fact, this post is a row in my Coda writing table!)

I was able to use the Coda API to upload all of my existing posts from Dropbox and write a little script that gets my content from coda when my daily Netlify job runs.

Overall, I think Coda has a lot to offer for this model of creating content, so I'm excited to try it out!

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