Does A Txt Reader Support Bookmarks?

2026-03-28 09:39:10 226

3 Answers

Aiden
Aiden
2026-03-30 10:07:58
My ebook workflow is chaotic—I highlight passages in TXT files for my book club, research, and fanfic drafts. Without proper bookmarking, I'd lose my mind. Most default text editors fail here, but specialized readers like FBReader surprise you with robust tools. Their bookmark system lets you color-code by priority, which I abuse for tracking symbolism in 'The Left Hand of Darkness.'

Discovered a trick: if your reader lacks bookmarks, inserting something like ★★★ at key spots makes them searchable. Clunky, but it works. Better yet, some apps let you pseudo-bookmark via 'last read position' metadata, though that disappears if you edit the file. After losing annotations one too many times, I finally caved and bought an app specifically for its TXT bookmark sync. Best $4 I ever spent.
Owen
Owen
2026-03-30 21:35:36
Ever since I started reading e-books on my phone, I've been obsessed with finding the perfect TXT reader. One thing I really needed was bookmark support—I read like five books at once, and losing my place is a nightmare. After testing a dozen apps, I found that most basic TXT readers don't include bookmarks, which feels like such a missed opportunity! But there are gems like Moon+ Reader or ReadEra that handle plain text files beautifully, letting you drop virtual bookmarks just like physical ones. I even started converting my EPUBs to TXT just to use these features, though formatting gets messy sometimes.

What's wild is how differently apps implement this. Some let you long-press to bookmark, others require menu diving, and a few even sync your progress across devices. I once lost a week's worth of bookmarks when switching phones because the app stored them locally—learned that lesson the hard way. Now I stick to cloud-friendly readers, even if it means fewer customization options. The trade-off's worth it when I can pick up 'The Three-Body Problem' on my tablet exactly where I left off on my commute.
Yaretzi
Yaretzi
2026-04-03 05:15:38
Back when I used to commute two hours daily, TXT readers were my lifeline—no internet needed, just endless 'Discworld' novels in plain text. But man, the bookmark struggle was real. Basic apps would 'remember' your position... until you opened another file or your phone died. I remember rage-quitting a whole app because it reset my 300-page spot in 'Project Hail Mary.' These days I only use readers with explicit bookmark functions, preferably with visual indicators. CoolReader's been my go-to; it shows little flags in the margin that you can tap to jump back.

What's funny is how this limitation made me appreciate physical books again. There's something satisfying about dog-earing a page that no digital marker can replicate. Though I'll admit, when an app gets it right—like letting you name bookmarks or add notes—it's magic. Found one recently that even exports your TXT bookmarks as a separate file, which is genius for academic reading.
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3 Answers2025-09-03 14:53:26
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1 Answers2025-09-03 19:15:06
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