Notebooks are as diverse as our vehicles: they come in different sizes, shapes and materials. Different bindings, paper weight, line width (or square, or no line at all), hard cover, soft cover, processed paper, untreated paper-only inside. Recommend a... moreNotebooks are as diverse as our vehicles: they come in different sizes, shapes and materials. Different bindings, paper weight, line width (or square, or no line at all), hard cover, soft cover, processed paper, untreated paper-only inside. Recommend a notebook to everyone will be a notebook to anyone.
A better strategy is to learn different types of laptops in order to best understand your decisions while avoiding obvious dullness.
1. Size
First, let's talk about size. The size of laptops is almost (but not very) standardized and depends on whether you are looking at Europe or the United States. Generally speaking, the European sizes are A, B and C series, ranging from A0 to A10, B0 to B10 and C0 to C10. These all share the same ratio, so they have the same shape but different sizes: the smaller the number, the larger the paper. The way these sizes work is a very beautiful arithmetic work: the basic aspect ratio of all A-series papers is 1: √2 (about 1.14). A0 is the largest size you can hardly... less