and
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\/__/ \/__/ \/__/ As a non-programmer (well apart from some history in BBC Basic) I thought I was well qualified to step in here J
I started to panic when Simon made two recent statements. The first was that he was writing Hal Junior books which were relatively easy to structure and write and secondly that he was looking at a rewrite of yWriter to take account of all possible platforms.
The panic was that he would have no incentive to develop the advanced aspects of yWriter that make it uniquely useful for post-first draft editing. And that he would get diverted from perfecting the program and spend time just rewriting into a multi-platform environment.
Then I thought for a while – always dangerous.
The yWriter program already goes beyond what Simon needs to use for his own writing – so he continues to respond to legitimate user needs. And, actually I sympathise with a rounded (or polymath) approach where by an individual achieves maximum fun by working on many projects simultaneously. Simon is one of life’s productive individuals and always busyness is how he achieves so much. So actually, he will achieve more simple advancement of yWriter by pursuing what might look on first glance to be a diversionary activity.
You can almost feel a level of admiration for Simon that starts me asking for an autograph here.
So – people (programmers) have been making suggestions on tools to use; what can mere writers do to help? How about helping Simon design the next yWriter?
I want to start that off with 10 strategic thoughts. Please feel free to weigh in here.
1 some platforms are equivalent in potential although users may have different setups (number of screens, input device etc)
2 some platforms are naturally restricted and may not be best served by an attempt to have a full yWriter experience implemented (eg can I really expect to do more that originate text on an obsolete Dell PDA or any small modern phone)
3 the place in the market for yWriter is not just an environment to collect research and bash out a first draft – instead it should have the tools to take that draft to completion
4 yWriter has recently become a medium to prepare works for e publication – that was a very sensible strategic as well as practical development and should be maintained
5 yWriter’s backup capabilities – both automated while writing and as executed (eg ftp backup) are already class leading and should remain that way
6 the degree of user customisation is already good (eg language files) but could be improved for those users who want to tailor what they are working with. Tags can be more developed. Edit states could be expanded from outline, draft etc. Characters could have more attributes.
7 viewpoint and other attributes of scenes could be better reported. The scenes view could be sortable.
8 things that are variable could be reported so that are more easily tracked (eg times of scenes)
9 text could be tagged for collection and reporting (eg speech by character X could be collected for analysis to ensure consistency)
10 interface with mind mapping (plot/character development) software could be facilitated by publishing a specification to be met for automated input of the output of other programs (eg Freemind/Freeplane)
Just my 2p worth as ever
Regards
David
Andrew,
I personally use a Windows based platform, but if I were to consider another device, I would install vmware player and continue using yWriter in a trouble free Windows environment where I could focus on writing with my creative side instead of hassling with technical difficulties that continually waken my other side.
I currently use vmware to run xp under windows 7. It certainly is not necessary, but it allows me to have a 32bit os to connect to work which seems to appease the techies when something goes wrong. The virtual environment on my machine is plenty fast enough to play streaming high def videos which is more than fast enough for yWriter.
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Regards
Carl
Regards
Simon Haynes
I include TEX and HTML directly in my scenes, so I can generate print and ebook versions from the same project. That's the reason for all the updates and changes to yWriter exporting over the past 12 months.
I think my first goal has to be yWriter6 using GTK, and then a kickstarter for cutdown android and iPad versions. The most important thing on portables would be to load and save the yW5 project transparently - the exact features on offer aren't relevant. (For example, do you need import from RTF on a portable?
One thing I may have to do is move away from RTF and use HTML or XML instead for the scene content. That would make life a lot easier when it came to editing on portable devices. Word processors which export to RTF generally have HTML export as well.
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One thing I may have to do is move away from RTF and use HTML or XML instead for the scene content.
I'd add my nay to this. At least the markup needs to be easily
searched and replaced for manuscript formating for submission like in
previous versions of ywriter that did not support rtf.
Michelle
Writer / Web Designer
http://michellejnorton.com
http://denverfictionwriters.com
http://about.me/michellejnorton
I'd just allow the user to export yWriter to MMD and they could pick a tool for additional conversions. (That's what I do with ebooks - export to a suitable HTML file.) I'm not going to include other people's code or applications with yWriter because there's no way I'm falling foul of GPL or licensing requirements.
Off-hand, do you know whether MMD supports fonts (typeface, style and size?)
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Urg...i'd vote to keep formatting for tabs, italics, undreline and bold....have you ever searched a 100000 word doc to put formatting in?..it sucks.
yWriter needs formatting, we should care what happens inside
how many people routinely use the external editor option for scenes
I personally don't want my heart and soul in the cloud, but if that is what you want, yWriter will export chapter and scene, and ySync will sync it to another drive/folder which I presume could work with the cloud.
I personally don't want my heart and soul in the cloud, but if that is what you want, yWriter will export chapter and scene, and ySync will sync it to another drive/folder which I presume could work with the cloud.
On Jul 11, 2012 10:03 AM, "Mark Edwards" <2.mark....@gmail.com> wrote:
Why change something that works perfectly fine. Unless of course Simon can produce a piece of software that will write my novel and earn me a fortune. Three Hundred Shade Of Greenbacks perhaps?
What would make it more portable for me, would be if yWriter could export to online storage, in a format ch000-sc000.rtf. That way, I can work on scenes, in and on pretty much any device. Maybe even add new scenes outside yWriter simply by using the correct file naming format. This could also provide a simple sync/back-up option.
Googler drive with google docs could offer another option, although I'm not sure what format a .gdoc is.I'm looking forward to a possible iPad version/compatibility, as I currently work on scenes using Pages, with the awkward importing and exporting. While the iPad is great for drafting / proofing, as with most mobile devices, I struggle to do any real editing on it.--
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While I love writing the first draft of anything in yWriter, I use ‘open with external editor’ constantly when editing. Word’s great for picking up all those little typos and misspellings I seem to pepper my writing with, and even the grammar checking stuff helps sometimes (I did say sometimes ;-) ).
I don’t know if the external editor function’s tied in with the RFT file format, but if RTF gets dropped will the function still be available with whatever replaces it? I really do rely on it once I’m happy with a story’s overall structure.
Cheers
C
From: ywr...@googlegroups.com [mailto:ywr...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Dave Shaw
Sent: Wednesday, 11 July 2012 5:45 AM
To: ywr...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [yWriter] Re: Kickstarter/yWriter Mac/iPad
Understood. I just wanted to make it clear that I don't want to see what I would consider a step backward in the editor interface.
There is one other group of users that would be affected by moving away from rtf, though. I don't have any idea how many people routinely use the external editor option for scenes, or how much formatting they do using it. If anyone is doing 'fancy stuff' this way that the yWriter scene editor doesn't support, that could be a barrier for them moving to a different format, depending, of course, on the capabilities of the new format and such editors as support it. I don't know how to determine whether this is a significant issue, but I think it should be part of the discussion.
Of course, I think there have been support issues with it in the past, so Simon might be just as happy if it did go away. (grin)
Dave Shaw
From: Matthew Rasnake <ma...@coffeemonk.com>
To: ywr...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Tue, July 10, 2012 2:27:43 PM
Subject: Re: [yWriter] Re: Kickstarter/yWriter Mac/iPad
On Tue, Jul 10, 2012 at 1:36 PM, Michael Mefford <meff...@gmail.com> wrote:
yWriter needs formatting, we should care what happens inside
I think moving away from RTF to some form of human-readable markup language (be it XML, Markdown, or what have you) doesn't necessarily mean that you'd have to enter obscure text-formatting by hand. The way I see it, XML or Markdown is (or can be) a behind-the-scenes thing (like RTF currently is), and for the average/normal user, there'd be zero difference in the day-to-day use of the app. Especially in the use case of the "old school" users mentioned previously, who just want a way to get their novel into a .doc format file. However, for those of use who live simultaneously on several different platforms (I write and edit on Ubuntu, Mac, my wife's iPad, and my iPhone), having a human-readable, simple text markup that we can edit in any of a dozen iOS apps would be a huge boon, and would allow me to "stay within" yWriter, instead of exporting and then re-importing the project.
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