Midcent vs. Typora
Typora renders Markdown the moment you type it — no split pane, no preview button. Midcent moves the page left as you type — like a typewriter carriage. Both are beautiful. They just care about different kinds of beauty.
Typora and Midcent are both minimal, focused writing tools that put a lot of thought into the experience of typing. If you're comparing them, you probably care about what writing feels like on screen, not just what it produces. The question is whether you want the elegance of rendered Markdown or the warmth of a typewriter.
The short version
Typora is a Markdown editor that hides the syntax as you type, rendering headings, bold text, code blocks, tables, and images inline. The result is the cleanest Markdown writing experience available — you get the portability and simplicity of Markdown without ever seeing an asterisk or hash mark unless you want to. Custom themes, file tree sidebar, outline panel, math rendering, diagrams.
Midcent is a typewriter-style writing application. The cursor follows a carriage, the page has paper texture, and Purist Mode turns backspace into strikethrough. It manages chapters, tracks daily writing goals through Paper Trail, and stores notes in the Drawer. It doesn't use or render Markdown. Midcent cares about the feel of the writing session, not the format of the output.
| Midcent | Typora | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $14.99 one-time | $14.99 (one-time, 15-day trial) |
| Platforms | macOS (Windows coming soon) | macOS, Windows, Linux |
| Markdown support | Exports to Markdown | Native (live rendering) |
| Typewriter carriage | ✓ | — |
| No-delete mode | ✓ (Purist Mode) | — |
| Paper textures | ✓ | Themes (custom CSS) |
| Math / diagrams | — | ✓ (LaTeX, Mermaid) |
| Tables | — | ✓ |
| Chapter management | ✓ | File tree (folder-based) |
| Daily writing goals | ✓ (Paper Trail) | — |
| Per-chapter notes | ✓ (the Drawer) | — |
| Local files | ✓ | ✓ |
| Account required | No | No |
| AI writing features | No. The words are yours. | No |
Where Typora is the better choice
If Markdown is central to your workflow — if you write blog posts, technical documentation, or anything that needs headings, code blocks, links, and tables — Typora is the best Markdown writing experience available. The inline rendering eliminates the split-pane problem entirely. You see what you'd see in a rendered preview, but you're typing in Markdown. For developers, technical writers, and bloggers who think in Markdown, Typora is hard to beat.
Typora also supports LaTeX math rendering, Mermaid diagrams, and custom CSS themes. It runs on Linux. And at $14.99, it's a genuinely good value for what it offers.
Where Midcent is the better choice
If you're writing prose — fiction, essays, memoir, longform nonfiction — you probably don't need Markdown. You need a place to sit down and write sentences. Midcent was built for that and only that.
The carriage movement creates a rhythm. The paper textures give the screen warmth. Purist Mode's strikethrough mechanic preserves your changes on the page instead of erasing them. Paper Trail turns your daily writing habit into something you can see. The Drawer puts notes right next to the chapter you're working on. Chapter management gives long projects structure without requiring a file manager.
Typora is elegant. Midcent is warm. Typora makes syntax invisible. Midcent makes the screen feel less like a screen. If you spend most of your writing time in long-form prose and want the environment to feel like a writing desk rather than a code editor, Midcent is designed for exactly that.
Typora's philosophy
Markdown is the best format for portable, structured writing. The editor should render it in real time so you never have to choose between writing and previewing. Clarity of format is the priority.
Midcent's philosophy
Prose doesn't need Markdown. It needs a page with texture, a cursor with weight, and sometimes a backspace key that won't let you erase. Clarity of experience is the priority.
Typora asks: what should this text look like? Midcent asks: what should writing this text feel like? One cares about the rendered output. The other cares about the hour you spent at the keyboard.
Can you use both?
Yes, and for different purposes. Draft your novel or essay in Midcent — carriage movement, Purist Mode, Paper Trail. When you need to publish, export to Markdown and open it in Typora for formatting: add headings, links, code blocks if needed, and export to HTML or PDF. Midcent for the writing. Typora for the formatting. Both local, both one-time purchases, both respectful of your files.
The honest take
Typora is the best Markdown editor ever made. If Markdown is your format, this comparison probably doesn't change that. Midcent is something else entirely — a writing environment that isn't about format but about feel. Carriage movement, paper texture, a backspace key that strikes through instead of deleting. If you write prose and want the time you spend drafting to feel different from the time you spend in every other app on your computer, Midcent is $14.99 on the Mac App Store — one purchase, and it's yours.
$14.99 on the Mac App Store. macOS. Windows coming soon.
Midcent — a quiet place to write.