![]() If you are not familiar with how 'navigation' works in Word I would be quite happy to put up a quick explanation on here, it's a very useful feature which not everyone appears to know about. ![]() I use MS Word 2010 for all of my work from flash to full length novels, the issue with navigating around large documents, is easily overcome using the 'navigation' feature and 'headings' both of which I believe are on all versions of Word. The right hand window brings up the document associated with whatever is selected in the left hand side.Ĭlick to expand.I have Scrivener and use it less and less as time goes on. On one side (the left is my preference), you have the hierarchy of your sections along with their synopses and optionally a few other bits of metadata. ![]() In that setup, you have two editing windows. My favorite Scrivener feature remains locked outline mode. That's a dreadfully boring thing, but it helps. Some of my needs are specialized, like mail merge. My usual layout is "draft" view, which is reflowable text without all the adornments, the table of contents in the navigator pane, and I use features like editing window splits and editing more than one file at a time. I have databases that use a lot of Devonthink's features, but it's also useful in simple scenarios, too, like just bundling up and syncing files.Ĭuriously, I use Nisus in a somewhat Scrivener-like way. Devontthink serves as a way to sync projects as units. Currently I outline in OmniOutliner, mind map in MindNode, and write in Nisus Writer Pro. I ended up with more of a piecemeal setup. It's not the only way to write, but if you put on blinders and lived your writing life in Scrivener, odds are you'd be happy.
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