![]() ![]() ![]() With Highland, I can then convert that Fountain file to PDF or Final Draft. Using Scrivener’s “Compile…” command, I can then export a group of Scene and Sequence documents as a single plain text Fountain file. If I edit them, those changes appear within Scrivener after the next “Sync > with External Folder…” Meanwhile, iA Writer still sees the individual files. I “borrowed” icons from the Storyist application to customize Scrivener’s Binder.) (I prefer working with a minimized Scrivener UI. I use Scrivener’s “Sync > with External Folder…” command to build a binder for the script, which maintains a link to those original files. IA Writer is perfect for scenes, while Scrivener is great for the bigger script.īecause Fountain files are plain text, Scrivener is happy to handle them. I can then work with them using iA Writer on a Mac, iPad, or iPhone, which is handy. I write scenes in iA Writer using Fountain syntax, saving them as plain text files in a Dropbox folder. I love the flexibility of having one scene or one sequence per document and organizing them within Scrivener’s Binder - as was described so well by Stu Maschwitz on Prolost.įortunately, Fountain lets me leverage both iA Writer and Scrivener. I just wish it had features similar to Scrivener’s Binder and Compile. IA Writer is my favorite application to write in because of its minimalist UI and Focus Mode. ![]() A reader named Gerry wrote in to share his screenwriting workflow, which uses Fountain as a bridge between Scrivener, iA Writer, Dropbox and Highland. ![]()
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