Workspaces
A workspace is one room for one thing - a whiteboard, Mesh, and all your materials kept together. Open it and everything is right where you left it.
Where a workspace lives
Every workspace sits inside a subject. A subject like Math holds one workspace for each thing you're working through, like Geometry. Open a subject and its workspaces show up as square tiles; choose one to step inside.
- Subject
- A broad area, like Math. It holds your workspaces and nothing else.
- Workspace
- One focused room, like Geometry - the whiteboard, Mesh, and your materials in one place.
The trail across the top shows where you are - Home, then your subject, then this workspace - and each step walks you back up. New here? Start on Home & Subjects to make your first subject and workspace.
What's on screen
A workspace is one endless whiteboard with a slim frame floating over it. Nothing ever covers the whiteboard for good - panels lift on top and set back down when you close them.
- The whiteboard fills the whole background - the board is where you sketch, write, and lay things out by hand.
- Your materials open in panels on the left, one at a time.
- Mesh sits in its own panel on the right, always a tap away.
- A slim frame wraps the edges: the trail and search up top, round buttons down each side, drawing tools along the bottom.
Your materials on the left
The round buttons down the left edge open your materials, one panel at a time. Tap one to open it, tap again to close, or tap another to switch. Each kind has its own color, so you find it fast.
The right side is Mesh and nothing else, so your materials and your assistant never crowd each other. Drag the left buttons into whatever order suits you.
It all saves here
A workspace remembers itself. Your whiteboard, your materials, and every conversation with Mesh stay in this one room - close it, come back a week later, and it's exactly as you left it. Open a different workspace and Mesh picks up that room instead, with its own materials and history.
Mesh even keeps a private note of what matters here, so it doesn't make you repeat yourself. Read or clear that note in Workspace settings, where you also rename or delete the whole workspace.
The layout is yours
Open only the panels you need and arrange the room to fit the work. Widen a panel, float one loose over the whiteboard, blow one up to fill the screen, or tuck the whole frame away for nothing but canvas - and it's remembered for next time. Panels & bars walks through every move.
Tip Keep one workspace per thing you're working through, like Geometry - it stays focused, and everything you make lands in one place.