![]() If you primarily write non-fiction or screenplays or write fiction and want a program that will let you do pretty much whatever the hell you want workflow-wise (with a correspondingly higher level of confusion), you’ll probably prefer Scrivener.Īs is often the case, the fast and dirty comparison is a bit misleading: either program can help you write fiction or non-fiction.If you primarily write fiction and want a program that will provide you with an easy framework for organizing your writing, you’ll probably prefer StoryMill. ![]() Not everyone wants to wade through my periphrastic meanderings (just discovered that word, and it’s making me really happy sorry for sounding like a total vocab snob), so here’s the quick and dirty: Although StoryMill is my personal application of choice, there’s a lot to love (and some things to dislike) about both programs. Well, here it is: my definitive StoryMill vs. Particularly now that StoryMill has a timeline view (as of this writing the only Mac creative writing software to implement the feature) and Mariner Software is distributing it, it seems like a more and more people are wondering whether they should use StoryMill or Scrivener. ![]() ![]() I’m a long-time user of StoryMill (starting when it was originally called Avenir), but I’m also something of a software junkie, so when Scrivener came out I tried using it for a few projects. ![]()
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