Use the template chooser window (when a project is open, go to File->New Project to get the window). Then click on the "Options" button in the lower left corner and select "Import Templates"
The author managed to get more details out of KB regarding Scriv for iOS, and even spelled Scapple right until the penultimate sentence of the article.
...it still pops up with the old title, not the new one. Really depends on what you mean by "it". The name of the file that comes out at the other end? The title page? The header on each page? What happens if you compile to PDF? Where is the old title still showing up with regards to that...
As long as the timeline is simple, and you don't mind all events being evenly spaced, then you could just create a "Timeline" folder and just put in events as they occur. I'd suggest the outline view. Title everything briefly (ex: "Fire Destroys Sarah's Apt."), and if you have ex...
If your paragraph indents are (at least partially) due to using the TAB key, then in Word, you'll want to select & copy one tab character and then do a search and replace for all TAB characters, replacing them with nothing. Then import that version of your manuscript into Scrivener. If the inden...
All the cards are going to end up the same size, so keep that in mind (if you want variable sized synopses, then I'd go with the outline view instead). In the lower right corner of the corkboard, there should be a tiny icon that looks like 4 index cards if you squit really hard (or have really good ...
I'm less worried about the diff and compare issues another poster talked about -- as you point out, source code text/Unicode files are not RTF files -- but being able to say "this is the definitive project as of THIS time" and easily go to any of those saved states *without* affecting any...
The .scrivx file is to your project as a card catalog is (was?) to a library: All writing, notes, snapshots and other content is stored in the various folders and files of the topmost .scriv folder. So don't just extract the .scrivx file; it won't do anything for you on its own. Instead, extract the...
Doesn't DT, or DT Pro, or DT Pro Office do automatic OCR scanning of imported PDFs so that searches of scanned documents can turn up results even if the PDF doesn't contain text? Seems like at least one of those versions of it does that, and that the OCR text layer would be Spotlight indexed as well.
My issue with the 11 for your scenario is that it would be fine at first, but as the battery aged over the next couple of years, you'd be cutting it pretty close. That's why I went with a 13" air: battery life. The new ones should last you the entire 12 hours for the first year, then slowly dec...
Because when I'm deep into editing or writing, I start making stupid mistake like editing the backup copy that I was searching through. Also, without a dual monitor setup, I can't easily fit all the info I want in two Scrivener sessions. A PDF can't be accidentally edited within Scrivener, and can b...
I don't think you can search on date using any SEARCH tools, but you can enter outline mode for any given folder in the binder, and then enable the "modified date" column, then visually scan for the date or dates you're interested in.
I'm guessing that in your Contents section of the expanded compile window, you have it compiling a collection instead of the contents of the Draft folder. Look there for a drop-down control that allows you to select Draft.
Thanks for the screenshot, that helps a lot. It looks like you just need to select all of the contents of "New Folder", but not that folder itself. Then drag the selection up to Manuscript (or for more precision, use the Documents->Move->Move Left menu command). To select all the documents...