

When you open up the PDF, you’ll see the contents of your note. Exportnote Evernote PDF Notes Without Attachments If you have a note without any PDFs or other attachments, you’ll see them as a single PDF file. In each notebook folder, you’ll see your notes. When you drill into a stack (or Default Stack), you’ll see a folder for each notebook. If you use Evernote stacks, you will have other folders containing them. Default Stack will contain all your notebooks that are not a part of any stack. Using the pdf folder as an example, when you go in there you will have a number of folders. In there you’ll have a html and/or a pdf folder depending on your export options. Once the export is done, you’ll have a folder starting with exportnote and a date/time stamp. Obviously your time will depend on the amount you have to export and the speed of your computer.

It took about 4 hours for me to export my 9310 Evernote notes. When you start it up, you have a small window where you choose where you want the export to be saved (in my example I’m using my Desktop), and if you have the Advanced version you choose which format(s) you want, whether you want to include dates/tags, and whether you’d like to export everything or choose specific notebooks. You install it on your Mac or Windows computer and it will use the database that you already have downloaded with the Evernote client.

Now, ExportNote doesn’t actually download anything. I’m using the Advanced version in this article. You can capture the tags and dates of your notes, and choose which notebooks you want to export.
