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Ywriter vs scrivener
Ywriter vs scrivener











Do you need to track magic spells available for whatever reason? Just start labeling the documents that way and add icons.

  • Everything works from a single text “unit” that can be labeled as a scene, a character bio, a location, or anything else.
  • It is highly evolved and targeted initially towards Mac users (although they do make it available to Windows users as well). Scrivener, made by Literature and Latte ( ) is a fantastic tool that I’ve mentioned a few times on this blog already. That is the broad overview of the comparisons, but feel free to read on for the deep dive on each. YWriter – Although Scrivener can give you counts of the words you use so you can see if T”Throttle” is just coming up way too much, yWriter gives you the ability to see how many scenes features which characters or locations, how often a characters serves as a POV, and more. yWriter has clearly labeled sections for Locations/Characters/Items, and lets you follow some very explicit (hardcoded) attributes for those items. Writer’s Tools (tagging, metadata, labeling, etc)Įqual – Scrivener has a LOT of flexibility here with custom metadata, page and project notes, POV, status fields, etc… But maybe it’s too much.

    ywriter vs scrivener

    Scrivener – You have a lot more power to structure things however you like, nesting documents and foldersĮqual – Both possess good backup functionality. YWriter, very narrowly – Same metrics, yWRiter makes them more visible.

    ywriter vs scrivener

    Scrivener, hands down – Drag & Drop functionality, color, and fewer bugs If you just want a raw comparison, here you go: Feature

    ywriter vs scrivener

    You can also track your word counts and progress in both tools, but they have a few differences. Both tools allow building of scenes and being able to arrange them on the fly or tag them. Today, I’d like to dive into yWriter and Scrivener, both of which are exceptional tools in this space.

    ywriter vs scrivener

    There are dozens of tools out there that are designed to help make the writing process easier, a lot of which are targeted towards non-linear writing.













    Ywriter vs scrivener