

#Storyist review 2016 Bluetooth
Also, as far as we can tell, landscape support is out, and so input isn’t far removed from tapping away with two thumbs in Facebook, unless you prop your iPhone up and type using a Bluetooth keyboard.
#Storyist review 2016 windows
On Mac, Windows and iPad, Scrivener offers index cards for making notes and arranging a project, but they’re absent on iPhone. On the iPhone, things are a little more pared back. Simplification elsewhere is not to the detriment of the app.

Arguably, the writing interface – which is more streamlined and aesthetically pleasing – is even an improvement. On the iPad, Scrivener is functionally very similar to the desktop version. It’s no wonder so many screenwriters and novelists are very keen on the app. But what you do get is powerful outlining, the means to combine project snippets into a whole, rearrange them to suit, and export the lot in a wide variety of formats.

Similarly, although Scrivener does give you a modicum of control over text styles, that’s mostly for purely structural purposes. The binder, including the research folder Whether you’re tapping out something for NaNoWriMo or mischievously beavering away to unleash that horror story about beach monsters with massive teeth just in time for the summer, there’s a cracking app here for you. So without further ado, here’s our selection of the very best writing apps for iPhone, when you’ve a novel in your head bursting to get out.
#Storyist review 2016 plus
Not that your iPhone’s screen necessarily is that small these days – a Plus iPhone may not have the display acres of an iMac, but it’s more than enough for writing – with the right app installed. What’s more, we’ve now got to the point where several great apps clamour for the attention of writers looking to compose something more substantial on the small screen. The thing is, for a great many people, an iPhone is the only computer in their life. After all, that’s what proper computers are for, right? Back then, we mostly focussed on apps for writing the odd blog post or notes for a novel, reasoning (although not explicitly writing) that you’d have to be a bit bonkers to tap out an entire novel on a smartphone. Since we last delved into writing apps for iPhone, a lot has changed.

And, no, we don’t think you’d be mad for doing so Yes, you can write the next blockbuster novel on your iPhone or iPad. Married with two grown sons, she lives in Sussex.Hi! Thanks for reading. This post looks better in our award-winning app, Tips & Tricks for iPhone. Vanessa's stories have been commissioned by literary journals, the British Council, for BBC Radio 3 and BBC Radio 4, and are widely anthologised. Her fifth book in as many years is forthcoming later in 2012. She is contributing editor of Short Circuit - Guide to the Art of the Short Story (Salt). She is author of two collections: Words from a Glass Bubble - a collection of mainly prize-winning stories - and Storm Warning (Salt Modern Fiction). Her novel The Coward’s Tale (Bloomsbury) was selected as a Financial Times Book of the Year and Guardian readers’ book of the year. She is contributing editor of Vanessa Gebbie is a novelist, short storyist, editor, writing tutor and occasional poet. Vanessa Gebbie is a novelist, short storyist, editor, writing tutor and occasional poet.
