Compare Chrome extensions: MarkView vs HashTest - Realtime Hashtag Testing
Stats | MarkView | HashTest - Realtime Hashtag Testing |
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User count | 3,000+ | 10,000+ |
Average rating | 4.02 | 3.71 |
Rating count | 58 | 14 |
Last updated | 2019-03-08 | 2016-11-03 |
Size | 778.24K | 16.38K |
Version | 2.6.5 | 1.0.4 |
Short description | |
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View markdown file in Chrome. | Find the best hashtags while you type, with real time color-based quality scores. |
Full summary | |
MarkView support Github Flavored Markdown, such as table, task list and so on. MarkView also provides table of content for document, fully customizable document and code view styling, and much more. User can use emoji in MarkView! Emoji usage: use alias ":smile:" or shortcut ":D" in Markdown file to represent "smile icon". Please check with MarkView Editor to play with it. The mapping table is here https://markview.bitbucket.io/icons/ MarkView support footnote, superscript, subscript, mark, insert and more. Please play with MarkView Editor to see those actions. Post installation:
keyword: markdown |
Easily discover the best and most popular hashtags to increase your reach on Social Media. What does HashTest.io do? HashTest.io tries to help you find the best hashtags for your social media content whether it’s Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, or whatever. Why do hashtags matter? Hashtags are essential to making sure your content reaches the correct audience. In fact, using hashtags on Twitter can increase engagement with your content by up to 40%. Why does hashtag popularity matter? Super-popular hashtags have diminishing marginal returns: if everybody on the planet uses them, your content will be lost in the torrent. But using obscure and relatively unused hashtags is utterly useless too. So the best hashtags are the ones that are both popularly used and most likely to result in increased engagement. So how does HashTest.io determine what hashtags are best? With some super awesome number crunching magic, analyzing tons of data, and a pinch of dragon’s blood. Obviously. Why does HashTest.io not report on other analytics data such as likes, retweets, shares, and other things? |