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 | Notebooks and Pages Notebooks resemble their real-world paper counterparts, making them familiar when it comes to organizing information. They are also just as flexible as real-world notebooks: you can create a Notebook with a single page, to hold a paper you’re writing. Or a Notebook with sections and subsections, to organize information about clients. You can store everything in a single Notebook, or spread your information out across multiple Notebooks. NoteBook is flexible, and lets you store your information in the way that works for you.
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 | Each new Notebook contains three different types of pages:
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• | Note pages - the most-common type of page in a Notebook, designed to hold notes, outlines, sketches and other information.
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• | Divider pages - just as with paper notebooks, Divider pages organize note pages into sections and subsections
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• | Multidex pages - pages at the back of every Notebook and that make it easy to find notes by what little you remember about them: a name, a number, the date you entered them.
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 | The first page of every Notebook is the Contents page, a Divider page that lists all of the pages in the Notebook and shows how they are organized into sections and subsections. Each Notebook also has a Cover page that you can use to conceal a Notebook’s contents. Each Notebook has only one Contents page and one Cover page, but you can add as many Divider and Note pages as you like.
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 | Each new Notebook contains a three different types of pages:
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• | Writing pages - Writing pages are like word processor documents, containing text instead of an outline of cells.
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• | Cornell Note Taking pages - Cornell Note Taking pages implement the Cornell Note-Taking system, the most widely-used system for taking lecture notes in North American education: a right column contains your notes, a left column review questions that you formulate, and a space at the bottom of the page contains your summary of the notes. You test yourself on the material by answering the questions with the notes column hidden (View → Notes Column). More information on the Cornell Note-Taking System is available here.
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• | To Do pages - To do pages are not really a special type of page, rather they are Note pages that NoteBook pre-configures for easily organizing to dos.
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 | Delete the current page by choosing Page → Delete. You can also delete a page by turning to a Divider that lists it, such as the Contents page, selecting the page in the outline, and pressing the Delete key. You cannot delete the Contents page.
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