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Ywriter or writeitnow
Ywriter or writeitnow













  1. Ywriter or writeitnow update#
  2. Ywriter or writeitnow plus#
  3. Ywriter or writeitnow zip#

I first tried writing in Word, but found it difficult to organize chapters, much less re-ordering them, and never could figure out where I was with word count. Word processors are as much about formatting a document as they are about writing a document. YWriter isn't a word processor program like Word. convert a scene from 'Draft' to '1st Edit')

Ywriter or writeitnow update#

There's no setting up involved - just remember to update the status of each scene as you apply edits.

ywriter or writeitnow

There are also two types of work schedule which tell you how much to do each day to meet your deadline: one expressed as a number of words to write, the other showing how many scenes to convert from outline to draft, draft to first edit, and so on. If you maintain the scene titles and descriptions to match the content of each scene, you can even generate a synopsis of your novel. YWriter also allows you to print out a variety of scene reports and summaries, which I find are helpful to make sure that my story is moving forward and isn't getting bogged down in irrelevant detail or can help me identify where my story might have derailed itself. There's also a timeline feature which lets you see a sort of "big picture" of how your events are moving along. You can make scene notes, or overall project notes. HOWEVER, these are all optional features that you may use or not use depending on your individual writing process. It can check if you're over-using any special words (so that it doesn't become an annoying tic for the readers). day one, hour one), note if the scene is only an outline, or a draft, or which draft it is, and of course, track word counts in all sorts of ways (by daily progress, by total, or per chapter or per scene, and it even can count letters. You may, if you wish, do preparation for every scene by adding characters (in the character list), decide which character's Point Of View a scene is about and then easily track which characters are the "star" of how many scenes each, place the chapter in a specific timeframe (i.e. You can temporarily take scenes out altogether if you don't think they fit anywhere, and you won't lose them if you change your mind about it and want to pop them back. Say you realise a character is acting on knowledge they don't possess until later in the story, and you have to shuffle things around.

ywriter or writeitnow

YWriter lets you easily re-order your scenes.

Ywriter or writeitnow zip#

(You would think I wouldn't fall prey to this after so many years of working with software, but I STILL manage to close files without saving my work!) It also creates automatic zip files of the entire project, by date.

Ywriter or writeitnow plus#

YWriter also does automatic backups of your work as you're writing, plus it automates the final save when you exit out of it. Your story is actually contained in the scene.

ywriter or writeitnow

And then you just write your story in that scene. So basically, you create a chapter, and then create a scene for it. You can just write one scene and make it the entire chapter. Just to clarify (and because I've had some awfully stupid days, too), you don't have to write multiple scenes per chapter.















Ywriter or writeitnow