![]() ![]() ![]() The quick-reference box at left shows a previous Word draft of the bibliography, for copying any existing reference entries from it. In the top editing window, I’m compiling the master bibliography from references as I proofread the draft in the bottom window, chapter by chapter. This screenshot shows the editing screen split horizontally, with two quick-reference boxes that I’ve set to “float” – to stay on top of the editing window. The other functions I find especially useful are screen splitting and quick-reference boxes (which I didn’t discover during the test drive). I sometimes treat essay composition like Lego, moving pieces of analysis around to fit in different places for an argument, and the Scrivener interface has helped me scale up that approach for longer work. This big-picture background feature of the app’s design is helpful for organizing and re-organizing a big writing project. You can compare different versions of a draft, take periodic snapshots of the whole thing to revisit prior versions after drastic edits, and keep the big picture always in view. But you can also park research documents and media here, and leave notes and tags on anything and everything. It works like a virtual binder where you keep all the different parts, like chapters, in different folders. Scrivener is an app for writing long documents, like books. ![]()
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