Compare Chrome extensions: Evernote Web vs React Developer Tools

Stats Evernote Web Evernote Web React Developer Tools React Developer Tools
User count 2,000,000+ 4,000,000+
Average rating 4.42 3.98
Rating count 11,455 1,511
Last updated 2014-12-11 2024-04-18
Size 31.48K 2.52M
Version 1.0.8 5.1.0 (4/15/2024)
Short description
Save all of your ideas and experiences in Evernote, then access them from every computer and phone you use. Adds React debugging tools to the Chrome Developer Tools. Created from revision b566064da on 4/15/2024.
Full summary

Evernote is an award-winning service that turns every computer and phone you use into an extension of your brain. Use Evernote to save your ideas, experiences and inspirations, then easily access them all at any time from anywhere.

Capture your memories

  • Save all of your notes, research and projects into one place
  • Create task lists and to-dos so you'll never forget a thing
  • Clip interesting webpages using Evernote browser extensions and plugins
  • Attach images, audio, PDFs, and more*

Find everything fast

  • Organize your notes using notebooks and tags
  • Search notes by keyword and text
  • Automatic image processing lets you search for words inside photos

Access from anywhere

  • All your notes are instantly synchronized among all the different versions you use
  • In addition to Evernote Web, there are free downloadable versions of Evernote for Windows, Mac, Android, iPhone, iPad, BlackBerry, and more available at www.evernote.com.

React Developer Tools is a Chrome DevTools extension for the open-source React JavaScript library. It allows you to inspect the React component hierarchies in the Chrome Developer Tools.

You will get two new tabs in your Chrome DevTools: "⚛️ Components" and "⚛️ Profiler".

The Components tab shows you the root React components that were rendered on the page, as well as the subcomponents that they ended up rendering.

By selecting one of the components in the tree, you can inspect and edit its current props and state in the panel on the right. In the breadcrumbs you can inspect the selected component, the component that created it, the component that created that one, and so on.

If you inspect a React element on the page using the regular Elements tab, then switch over to the React tab, that element will be automatically selected in the React tree.

The Profiler tab allows you to record performance information.

This extension requires permissions to access the page's React tree, but it does not transmit any data remotely. It is fully open source, and you can find its source code at https://github.com/facebook/react/tree/master/packages/react-devtools-extensions.