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Using a familiar tool is one less hurdle to contend with when tackling a writing project. At this point, I want an outlining tool rather than a writing tool.“I don’t need a special program for book writing I just need Word.” I’ve heard countless writers say that, and it’s true. Trying Scrivener did help me narrow the need I have for a tool. It’s not the tool I need right now, but I might try again when I’m ready to edit (again, as an under-writer, it may help to say “add a scene here”, which happens to me after the first draft). In moving all of the notes into Scrivener, I learned that no, I’m not going to use Scrivener for Moon and Mystery (Working Title). I’m hesitant because I’m used to seeing the edits in line (“All Markups”), but having multiple snapshots is a cool idea for editing. Scrivener acts like MS Word’s Track Changes with the view always at “No Markups”. Take one snapshot at draft one, make changes, and then compare to see added, deleted text (blue below). Instead there are these snapshots that you can compare versions. Okay, there is no visible inline editing. #SCRIVENER WINDOWS TEMPLATE FOR GROUPS AND ORGANIZATIONS HOW TO#I haven’t yet figured out how to export a character sheet or to create my own template.
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