How to Use Notes
What are Corelato Notes?
Corelato Notes are rich text documents designed for learning. They help you capture explanations, examples, summaries, references, code snippets, tables, links, and study material in one place.
Notes are currently useful on their own, but they are also being built as part of a larger learning system that will connect with courses, flashcards, study sessions, goals, habits, and public knowledge sharing.
Current note features
The editor currently supports the core formatting tools needed for useful study notes and public learning resources.
Formatting notes
You can format notes using the editor toolbar. Some formatting also works with familiar keyboard shortcuts, such as Ctrl + B for bold, Ctrl + I for italic, and Ctrl + U for underline.
The editor also supports common writing patterns like headings, lists, task lists, blockquotes, code blocks, tables, and dividers. These tools are useful for class notes, technical notes, tutorials, study guides, and public reference material.
Public notes
Notes can be private or public. Private notes are only visible to you. Public notes can be viewed by anyone with the link and may eventually appear in public profile and discovery features.
Public notes are useful for sharing study guides, explanations, class resources, technical tutorials, and learning references.
See a live public note
The demo account includes a public note that shows the current formatting capabilities of the Corelato editor.
View the Notes feature showcaseWhat is coming later
Notes are still in active development. The long-term goal is to make notes part of a connected knowledge system rather than isolated text documents.
Practical note-taking tips
Use headings to separate major topics, lists to break down steps, tables to compare information, and code blocks for technical examples.
If a note is useful to someone else, consider publishing it. Public notes are one way Corelato supports learning in public without requiring every note to be shared.