http://punkfluff13.livejournal.com/ (
punkfluff13.livejournal.com) wrote in
nanowrimo_lj2008-11-14 02:05 pm
![[identity profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/openid.png)
![[community profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/community.png)
ooh, ooh, pick me!
so, i haff another query.
is it normal that i'm doing my writing between Microsoft Word and my notebooks...
is there a better computer program to be using for it, or is Word my best option?
this may seem odd, but it's something that bugs me a lot....
is it normal that i'm doing my writing between Microsoft Word and my notebooks...
is there a better computer program to be using for it, or is Word my best option?
this may seem odd, but it's something that bugs me a lot....
no subject
toolage...
OpenOffice (http://www.openoffice.org/) is a good option, and allows you to save to .doc output among other things.
There are also several book writing tools - I've played a bit with YWriter which is quite nice and has, among other things, html output.
good luck!
no subject
despertelyneed. It should come on your system.(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
no subject
no subject
YWriter is great, especially if you're someone who likes outlines and structure.
Papel is better for those loose cannons, since it's basically a pile of postits. But these won't fall off the wall and doom your brilliant ideas to dust bunny devourment.
Writer's Cafe is somewhere in the middle, stringing postits in an organised structure. It also has some really nifty features like a prompt generator and name generator that I get heaps of use out of.
I've heard good things about Scrivener and Q10 from friends and on the forums, although I've never used either personally.
That said, I do most of mine in Word. Sure, it's a nagging beast about spelling, would fail third grade English, and flies into hysterics over the tiniest thing, but... what was I saying again?
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
(no subject)
no subject
no subject
I've tried yWriter, but since I don't really outline, I didn't like it as much. There's also Wordpad, but I use that for Uni, so I don't like using it for NaNo.
no subject
writerly wish list
I know everyone is different, but aren't there things we'd all benefit from? I want something that will keep track of chapters for me, and a table of contents, and an index (that would be SO handy)... something that will allow me to bookmark certain passages (I know Word has that feature, but it sucks) and make notes. And if I decide to add a chapter in between two others, or delete an entire one out of the blue, I want it to adjust accordingly. I don't want to have to go through Word and re-write all my chapter headings.
Am I just whining here, or do other people find Word to be deficient in these areas as well? I've never had the money for writing software, but even if I did I'd have no idea which one to pick.
no subject
However it works with Windows. And like I said I only really like to use it for Nano because I can just sit down and write and there are no distractions. For any formal papers or shorter projects that I work on I usually use Microsoft Word 2003
no subject
I've tried a lot of programs and almost settled on StoryMill at one point. StoryMill is good and fits the way I write. But it crashed on me once, making me lose about 200 words and I chucked it.
I've settled on scrivener because of it's other main feature - it does a save every second or so.
Paranoid? Who? Me?
no subject
no subject
no subject