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You don’t ‘need to put it on OneDrive’, OneNote does! Enabling OneDrive sync for a local notebook.
#Onenote sync android#
* this is not currently an option for iOS, Android or OSX versions of OneNote, your only option is to use OneDrive syncing. You just cannot share it very easily (or effectively). Export the page, section or entire notebook into the OneNote native format and you can put it wherever you want. If, however, you are already syncing your notebook via OneDrive then just use the export command. When creating a new notebook simply don’t select OneDrive as the location, choose This PC and select where you’d like to store the physical file.
#Onenote sync install#
Creating a local notebookįirstly it’s worth noting that to use OneNote syncing to OneDrive you don’t need to install the OneDrive cloud sync software it’s all built into OneNote.īut that said, if you really want to lose the ability to sync your notebook to mobile devices or if you are prepared to get sync conflicts when you share the notebook old-school using your cloud sync platform, then this is still an option for you.* one OneNote file(s) between your machines as you would expect. Confusingly you could even set that backup folder to be on OneDrive where it would then sync the actual. Under Options > Save & Backup you can tell OneNote to automatically place backups in a location that you dictate on schedule between once a minute and once every 6 weeks. You can get that and still use OneDrive syncing. What I actually want is a physical copy of my notebook so I can back it up It needs to create or move the notebook and then tell OneDrive that you’re now using OneNote syncing, hiding the notebook and then leaving that shortcut placeholder. If you want to share your notebook between devices and/or other people then you need to use the OneNote program itself to plumb in the syncing. URL=!7844&type=3 Ok, so what does this all mean? If you open the file with a text editor you can see the contents: The placeholder that sits within your OneDrive with the same name as the notebook is just a shortcut to the web-only OneNote view. You have the notebook stored on your machine (tucked away somewhere) and it just happens that it’s on the OneDrive servers where this special OneNote-only synchronisation occurs, hence the confusion. That is to say the file isn’t actually on OneDrive as a file that you can open.
#Onenote sync full#
The important thing is that you have a full copy of the notebook on your local machine and it’s only the changes that are being synced. When OneNote does its native ‘OneDrive sync’ it actually only sends the changes up to the cloud which subsequently then sends these changes out to the other devices. Normally, cloud sync services like OneDrive or Dropbox copy the newest version of the file up to the cloud and then send it out to all the other devices logged in to that account. There is a lot of magic going on behind the scenes when OneNote & OneDrive are syncing your changes between machines.
