The Cellar Door » Looking for another iOS developer

Thursday, July 9th, 2015

The Cellar Door » Looking for another iOS developer:

Literature and Latte (the creators of Scrivener) posted this on their blog on June 24, 2015:

A note to our users who have been waiting on this for far too long now: the iOS version has been feature-complete for a month or two but we are incredibly disappointed to say that it is still not ready for public beta testing – as we had hoped it would be by now – because of a number of outstanding issues. We are thus looking for a talented developer to help us get it ship-shape.

They have a history of taking their time to get product updates right, so I’m not worried about the delay. Except I wants my Scrivener for the iPad. I wants it.

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The Cellar Door » A Quick iOS Update

Saturday, May 2nd, 2015

The Cellar Door » A Quick iOS Update:

dduane:

While we’re speaking of Scrivener: apparently the iOS version is presently in in-house beta and is due for release sometime this summer.

OMG.

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So, how do you handle keeping different revisions of a work in progress? Writers probably don’t have as many weird untraceable interaction bugs as programmers, but I’m sure you guys are just as prone to waking up, looking at that section you rewrote last night, and wondering what the heck was in that drink.

Saturday, May 2nd, 2015

Well, since I changed over to Scrivener this isn’t really so much of a problem, as the program can be set to do automatic incremental backups every time you hit save – and these can be saved to Dropbox, which is how I manage it. (The excellent Fizzygins outlines here how to set this up for the Mac version of Scrivener.)

Scrivener can also be set to automatically back itself up when you finish a work session / close a project for the day. (While this isn’t mandatory, I always do this when finishing up, without fail – as failing to close a project in one device and opening it in another can cause confusion, or worse still, conflicted versions of the project file. (Yes, Scrivener does warn you when you open a file that hasn’t been properly closed elsewhere, but it leaves you the option to make a copy of the file and operate on that instead. My experience of this has been that it causes more confusion than it prevents, so I don’t do it.)

So when rereading your material the next day (or whenever) if you find that what you’ve written doesn’t work for you, you can always roll back to an earlier version. It takes a little searching sometimes to find the version you need, but just knowing that it’s there somewhere is very reassuring. 

(I usually also compile the last day’s save to ebook format and have Dropbox send it to my iPad, so I don’t have to wait to get downstairs to the big computer to go OMG-why-on-Earth-did-I-write-that? on rereading the material, but can do it first thing in the morning, in bed, just after checking the email. Maybe I’m just a glutton for punishment. (But I find that rereading the material first thing after waking up is a good way to set up for the day’s work.)

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I would just like to profusely thank you for inspiring me to get Scrivener. This thing is amazing, and so cool, and I’m not even done with the tutorial and I’m already in love. This is going to be so useful when I start my second novel! Do you have any advice/tips for using Scrivener, beyond the basics?

Sunday, March 8th, 2015

Oh God! I’m still a relative newbie with Scrivener: the program is so damn powerful. And my workload has been such the last year or so that I’ve had little time to do more than stumble around in it, and then strike out to find answers when something’s acting up.

When I bring up Google, though, I can see that these are Scrivener help-or-advice sites that I’ve visited more than once:

A great deal of useful Q&A, ranging from the simple to the extremely technical, goes on at the Writer Beta forum at StackExchange.

See also the entries here at WriteHacked. (They’re OSX oriented, but much of the advice will still be useful for Scrivener users running under Windows.)

Gwen Hernandez is a romance / suspense writer who’s also responsible for Scrivener for Dummies: her website’s blog has a lot of useful free Scrivener tips in it.

Gene Lempp has some tips: look at this one for dealing with chapter headings. (As you’d expect, there’s a lot of attention out there on how to get Scrivener to play nicely with the software needed to generate nice-looking .mobi files for Amazon.)

Also, there is a Google+ Scrivener users community.

And finally, Charlie Stross (to whom I am eternally indebted to getting the thing onto my radar in the first place) has some thoughts about using Scrivener here

Hope this helps. (I really should compile a more complete list of helpful Scrivener links one of these days. Adding to the to-do list…)

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I’ve forgotten whose recommendation I followed to find…

Thursday, March 5th, 2015

I’ve forgotten whose recommendation I followed to find this Scrivener tutorial by Jason Hough, but I liked it a lot. Even though I’ve used Scrivener for a while, I learned some good techniques from Jason’s approach to chapter and scene organization.

I mention it more because if you’ve never used Scrivener and are curious, it covers the most useful 20% without getting bogged down too much in the deeper layers. And since he’s screen-sharing his way through the presentation, you can just watch the first part to get a quick overview of what Scrivener is and why you might want to use it.

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windandwater: OKAYOKAYOKAY I JUST DISCOVERED SCRIVENER IS A THING WHY DIDN’T ANYONE TELL ME THIS…

Wednesday, April 16th, 2014

windandwater:

OKAY
OKAY
OKAY

I JUST DISCOVERED SCRIVENER IS A THING

WHY DIDN’T ANYONE TELL ME THIS WAS A THING

YOU KNOW, BEFORE I WROTE 73,000 WORDS THAT I WAS MAKING UP AS I WENT ALONG AND KEPT LOSING TRACK OF WHO WAS DOING WHAT AND HAD TO KEEP ALL MY NOTES AT THE BOTTOM OF A MASSIVE DOCUMENT THAT’S GETTING STEADILY OUT OF CONTROL

HOLY SHIT

I

I MIGHT ACTUALLY BE CRYING

I KNOW WHAT I’M DOING THIS WEEKEND

Oh, yeah. Scrivener is a thing.

I found it a few years ago when a list of well-known authors were being polled for their writing-process advice. And something like 75% of them said, “Oh, and if you’re using a Mac, you need to check out Scrivener.”

It’s a really interesting variation on the normal approach to a full-featured software package. It’s not the result of a big development team, with product managers and marketers and a team of programmers. It’s just one guy, and his obsessive pursuit of a program to enable his own writing projects.

The learning curve can be a bit daunting. But if you go through the tutorial to get some familiarity with the basic features, it doesn’t take that long to get productive with it.

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