To sum : I feel that I have lost time and money (I pay the downloaded megas). It is clearer than the help menu but it is just a list of features illustrated with some screenshots, not a tutorial. I have also downloaded the guide.pdf from storyist site (indispensable and lacking in both demo files). The contents of your original Scrivener file will not be affected. You can save this new Storyist project wherever you want. Storyist imports text and formatting information, images, comments, index card summaries, and project structure. Storyist creates a new, blank project and imports the contents of your Scrivener project. And when trying to open them from the file (using "open with Storyist"), one gets a message saying "Storyist cannot open files in the Microsoft Word document format" Opening a Scrivener project is straight-forward: Just select File > Open and choose a Scrivener project. It supports formats like RTF, HTML, Word, TXT, Scrivener, Final Draft. When trying from storyist, the files names are dimmed as inaccessible (I had firsdt checked with Finder info that they were fully readable and writable). Storyist offers more than half a dozen options to export files in various formats. docx files are still impossible to import.
Therefore, as advised in the reply, I have re-downloaded the demo form, I eventually got a newer and hopefully complete demo called 2.2.6. Again, is that it Oh, and you can drag an image off your computer or the internet into a picture box. I suppose so because of the reply I got (see below) and because I have found that it was named "Storyist-AutoUpdate-2.1.5.dmg". I can believe that the Storyist demo.dmg that I have recently downloaded through Mac-update may have been incomplete. I have now written three novels using Storyist and it has proven itself.
But I disliked the inadequacy of its content. Opening a Scrivener project is straight-forward: Just select File > Open and choose a Scrivener project. Download cracked Storyist IPA file from the largest cracked App Store. But, if you keep your work in one large file, you’ll want to click Import and split. Within that menu, you have the option to import individual files, which works great if you use a each chapter is a separate file approach in your drafting. The simplicity of Storyist keeps me focused on my writing. Other apps have the same or similar features. I’ve only begun to experiment and use all the available features. I appreciated the quick reply to my review. Fortunately, Scrivener has a fix for this too. The supported formats include PDF, DOC, DOCX, RTF, text, ODT, Final Draft, Fountain, Scrivener and HTML.