

I love the extra customizable, popup keyboard row. The iOS version is so awesome I can't see straight.

I can also put my research in it if I so desire, which I haven't done yet because I use two monitors.īest of all it is on my iPad, which I bought exclusively for Scrivener. It supports tables for organizing scene/character sheets, a little awkwardly but I've grown used to it. If I need to split the screen to examine either a previous scene or check out a character sheet I can. If I want to go chapter by chapter or scene by scene I can have separate documents within the same program. I can write my way, not the word processor's way. As we were going through the tutorial, for me it was more like, "Don't need that, next! Don't need that, next!." I also have Word on my phone and do a lot of minor edits on the fly as I'm reading what I did the day before on my phone.ĮTA: The hilarious thing is, I was convinced I needed and would love Scrivener until I took an online Scrivener class / webinar. If writing, Scriv might be more what you need. So it depends on what you need to organize. Most of my notes are either screen shots from websites (which are perfect for Evernote) or are pen and paper, so I don't need an extensive built-in system for project management. Everybody's process is different, though.

For me it would just function a lot like the most current version of Word, which I already had, so it would be silly for me to pay for another program. There are people who love Scrivener, but after a lot of investigating, most of them are using features I'm not interested in. I use a combo of Word and Evernote.no dedicated writing programs.
