
None of your notes pass through our hands, it simply creates HTML files in a folder of your choice.
One nice thing about this AppleScript is that it runs entirely on your device.
Select all items: In a file dialog like the one above, click anywhere in the folder, then press Command + A. Select multiple, individual items: Hold Command and select multiple files. All files in between will also be selected Select a large group of items: Click the first file, hold Shift, then click a second file. In the macOS Finder and many apps, there are a couple ways to select multiple items, including in some file dialogs like this: (Optional) Adjust any import features such as whether to keep the original creation date, and whether to use the first line or file name for note titles. Select the folder containing the exported files. In the dialog that opens, find the folder containing your exported notes. Choose or create a new folder to store your exported Apple Notes. In case your HTML files or the imported notes show an incorrect encoding in Bear, please try to run the following command in your HTML files directory using Terminal find. Non-photo attachments like PDFs or other files are not supported and will be excluded from export to HTML files. Rich media links will convert to plain text links. On earlier macOS versions, Apple Notes will not export photos Note: only macOS 10.15 Catalina supports photo export.
Text, lists, and photos should be included.
This will include most note contents, but not all. We built an Automator Workflow for macOS that can export all your Apple Notes as HTML files. Minimum system requirements: macOS 10.14 Mojave
#AUTOMATOR MAC MOVE FILES TO NEW DATED FOLDER FOR MAC#
But we do have a workaround for Mac users, and we’re exploring one for iPhone and iPad users. Currently, Apple Notes does not have a way to export all your notes for importing into Bear.