- Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing App Offline
- Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing App Version
- Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing Applications
- Ulysses is a Mac-focused writing tool available in the Mac OS and iOS app store. It also automatically syncs files to Apple’s iCloud, so it’s heavily embedded in this entire ecosystem. If you’re in the Mac-obsessed writers crowd, this app is ideal.
- Essay Launcher is ideal for teachers to reinforce the necessary steps of essay writing - brainstorming, creating a thesis, constructing three main arguments, providing supporting detail, and successfully concluding. It cements the idea that a rough draft is essential to crafting a good essay. A special thanks to Noah G. For the inspiration!
In my last post I went into some detail as to why Microsoft Word was not the best tool for creating long works of fiction, not because it was bad software, but because it wasn’t designed for that purpose. In this post I am going to offer you an alternative piece of software which is designed for exactly this task and has the added benefit of being free to use.
Essay Launcher is ideal for teachers to reinforce the necessary steps of essay writing - brainstorming, creating a thesis, constructing three main arguments, providing supporting detail, and successfully concluding. It cements the idea that a rough draft is essential to crafting a good essay. A special thanks to Noah G. For the inspiration!
![Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing App Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing App](https://miro.medium.com/max/3200/1*paCc-D7Fit7Ou2mz2PXKYw.jpeg)
The software is called RoughDraft 3.0 and is produced by Richard Salsbury who is himself a writer. You can download the software and check out Richard’s writing on his website here. Unfortunately, Richard is no longer developing the software, but apparently it runs under Windows Vista and Windows 7, and personally I have found it to be extremely reliable.
As you can see, it is running here under Windows XP Pro. If you have a Mac you can, apparently, run it under Wine or as I do, under a Windows OS in VMware Fusion. I will, by the way, be looking at writing tools for the Mac platform too, later in this series of posts.
Across the top you get the usual windows menu button bar which may be displayed stacked, as shown here, or as one long menu to maximise vertical screen space. You can also turn these off and use shortcut keys or menu options. Below these is the main editing window, shown here with five files open, with a tab for each one, and the current file highlighted.
In normal mode, you can use the Paragraph menu to specify whether you want the text shown in single, double or 1.5 line spacing quite separately from the print menu where you can also specify the line spacing for printed output. You can also zoom the text display without changing the font size, a feature that can be very useful if you are working against a deadline when your eyes are tired. It’s these little things that make RoughDraft such a pleasure to use.
In the side panel there are four more tabs, the current one showing the Files tab with the Windows Directory Structure above the list of files in the currently selected directory.
The software also has a couple of other modes, for screenplays (shown right), for stage or radio plays, and for prose, which is similar to the normal mode but inserts tabs at the beginning of paragraphs automatically and suppresses double spaces.
Subtitles 3 2 5 download free. I can’t really comment on the screenwriting and stageplay modes as I’m not a screenwriter, but they seem to work well and to have the elements you expect in such a tool. In the image to the right you can see that the tool in screenwriting mode with the side-panels suppressed.
One of the most useful features of RoughDraft is the side panel, which may be displayed on the left or right of the main text window according to preference.
It is shown below on the List Tab after a search through a directory of 31 files for the character name “Carris”. By clicking on any one of these references, the relevant file is opened and the cursor moved to the appropriate place in the text. This is extremely useful in revisions and editing.
You can also get RoughDraft to search for all instances within a single file and list those for you. Note that the references are to the original search, so if you edit the text, things will shift around. Pressing the Update button on the lower right will refresh your search and redisplay the results and Clear will clear them.
On the Ins Tab, there is a place to have text automatically inserted (Autowords) which pop up as soon as you start typing them and complete with a tab. There is also a selection panel for special characters such as the Euro symbol and accented characters and there are four separate Cut-and-Paste sections which operate independently of the OS cut and paste.
Finally there is the Pad Tab, which, if you use it, creates a text file with the same name as the file you are editing and the suffix _Pad.txt. Every time you open the main file, the text pad will open as well under this tab, making it a handy place to leave notes, place reminders and add to-do items.
The file format for RoughDraft is Rich Text Format, which means that the files can be directly edited using other packages, such as MS Word, OpenOffice Write or simply WordPad. RoughDraft does not add any special formatting or do anything obscure with the files – they’re just a collection of Rich Text files and that makes RoughDraft a very open product to work with.
You need to exercise care, though, if you use another package which does add in extra functions into the RTF format or do something exotic with it, as you may subsequently be limited to using only that software to make changes. RoughDraft just uses plain RTF, which is one of its strengths.
There are some very useful features built in to Roughdraft. There is the Instant Backup feature, which saves every open file in the workspace and then copies them to another place, preferably on another drive, great for snapshots and as a protection against drive failure. There is the usual dictionary and spell-check and live spell check can easily be turned on or off and a word count.
There are also features which are quite specific to writers. If you want to email your text to an agent or a publisher, for instance, you will want to convert Curly Quotes to Straight Quotes, since these often do not transmit properly in emails. There is a facility to do this and the ability to select Straight or Curly quotes in your text (I recommend straight quotes as it just saves problems later).
There are a couple of niggles which you might notice. One is that RoughDraft doesn’t recognise the ‘My Documents‘ alias for folders under Windows, so you have to trawl through the directory structure to find your work. Once it’s found it you tend not to worry about it again, but it is a niggle. Another is that there is no ‘Full Screen‘ editing mode, though you can hide pretty much everything but the text if you want to. These are really signs of RoughDraft’s age, but in practice they are such small things that they really don’t detract from the overall usability.
When you come to compile your manuscript together, you can print multiple files into one continuous document, with sequential page numbering throughout the document. The whole document is previewed on screen and you can change the line spacing for output to double space, say, while leaving the edited files as 1.5 line spaced.
You can also adjust margins and add in header and footer comments, and then output to a printer, including PDF printers like PDFCreator.
About the only thing that is missing is the ability to export multiple files to a single file for import into a separate program for final formatting. This can be done, but it means fiddling around with files and formats.
There is an excellent straight-forward manual available on-line which details what the program does and how the various options work. In practice this is rarely needed, though, as the interface is intuitive and unambiguous.
It’s only when you come to work with this software that you realise quite how good it really is. It is very easy to tab between files, making changes and to keep track of what you’ve done. There are little features which are subtle but excellent, such as when you change a file, a little disk icon comes up on the tab to show that it’s been changed but not yet saved. You can save individual files one at a time, but also save every open file that has changes pending all at once. I have had over thirty files open at once with RoughDraft and it has always responded snappily, even on older hardware.
If you’re going to use RoughDraft on a large project you are probably going to want to structure your work into files and have those files collected into separate directories, arranged by version. This isn’t a requirement of the tool but it does make life easier for you if you ever want to go back to a previous version for some reason.
Overall, RoughDraft is an excellent tool designed specifically to meet the needs of writers. It’s fast, user friendly and excellent at what it does, which is to handle large text projects like a professional. It has open file formats and plays well with other tools. It’s stable and reliable, and it’s free.
That makes it the benchmark against which I’ll be comparing other products in future reviews.
Here at ProWritingAid, we're geekily interested in writing tech, almost obsessively. And in honor of the upcoming NaNoWriMo, we thought we'd do a roundup of the apps we've reviewed over the years. Links to our full reviews are throughout.
Contents:
Best apps to tame distractions
Do you get sucked away into social media when you're supposed to be writing? There's an app to take care of that, of course. Actually, there are a couple. Which one you choose depends on how distracted you get.
For those of you who need to see what you're writing without worrying about formatting or making it pretty will love Ulysses. It's a straightforward text editor that lets you write and see what you're writing without worrying about formatting. You can do that later.
Others get majorly distracted by what they're writing and lose their train of thought. Do you break the flow of writing to go back and correct a spelling error or something that doesn't sound quite right? If you need to focus on what you will say rather than what you've already said, you need ilys. You can't see what you've already written, only the last letter you typed. Not even a whole word. A single letter.
For those who get sucked away into social media and end up following rabbit holes for hours, there's Freedom.to. You can block all of your time-wasting websites, apps, social media, and even your email. And the best part…you can block everything on all of your devices. So if you've blocked Twitter on your laptop, you can't just pick up your phone and surf. It's blocked there, too. Freedom.to. forces you to focus on writing instead.
Now for those of us who are mildly distracted, but still need to see what we've written, Write! is the perfect app. You can still edit as you go, and you can even perform some basic formatting. What it's great at is blocking out everything else on your computer screen so all you see is the word processing part.
Finally, for those who still want to see what they've written, but don't want their inner editor taking over while they're supposed to be writing, there's Rough Draft. It's like an old school typewriter on your computer screen. You can see everything you've typed, but you can't backspace and erase anything. Backspacing merely strikes through what you've written, reminding you it's a rough draft, not the finished product.
Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing App Offline
Best app for planners
Hands-down, it's The Novel Factory. You get a logical structure that helps you flesh out each part of your novel, from beginning call to action to the final conflict and denouement. You start out with your premise or what your story is about, and flesh out your story's skeleton (your story arc). You then work on creating your characters. Next, you write a short synopsis; then you flesh it out into an extended synopsis.
On it goes through creating scenes and detailed character sketches, from high level plotting to creating your story's world, and so much more. The Novel Factory is a planner's dream.
And they recently released an online version, where before you could only download a Windows version of the app. Now us Mac users can partake in its wondrous process.
But wait! There's another fabulous app that appeals to planners a little differently. Beemgee helps you flesh out your characters and plot by asking you detailed questions about each. There are almost 40 questions to answer for each character in your story. It really helps you get down to their essence and create 3-D characters. You build plot event cards for each element in a menu to help you look at location, story lines, motifs, point of view, and much more. Then you can start creating your Step Outline, which is a detailed outline of your novel to help you make sure you've covered everything before you begin writing.
Finally, where would this article be without mentioning Scrivener? The ultimate writing tool for planners, Scrivener offers you the planning structure you love best in an electronic version. Do you love to write all of your scenes on index cards and move them around to find the best order? You can do that with Scrivener. Do you like to capture pictures and other information to help you visualize your characters, locations, settings, etc.? You can do that, too, with Scrivener. Scrivener is like a big binder full of everything you need to write your novel: research, scenes, character sketch and setting templates, synopsis and overviews for each scene, plus much more.
So again, awesome programs for planners, albeit each a different style. Your best bet is to experiment with all three to see which makes more sense to you.
Best app for pants-ers
The best app for those of you who fly by the seat of your pants depends on how distractible you are.
If you are highly distracted while writing, you need a combination of Freedom.to and ilys. You can block every website, social media, and app that sucks your attention with Freedom.to, and you'll only be able to see the last letter you typed with ilys. Talk about serious focus on writing your story.
If you're only mildly distracted, programs like Ulysses, Write! or even Scrivener again are great for just letting the words flow.
Best app for ideas
Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing App Version
You've got to try One Stop For Writers. This writing app combines a little bit of planning in the form of templates to help you create your characters and your story's world, but it's much more.
Where its strength lies is in the 'library.' There's an 'Information Desk,' 'Thesaurus,' 'The Stacks,' and more. In fact, it can take days of roaming around the information in the library to see and experience everything.
Rough Draft 1 5 – Mac Writing Applications
You start at the 'Information Desk' to learn how to use the app. From there, you can go to the 'Thesaurus' with a comprehensive list for each of 13 categories like emotions, negative traits, talents and skills, symbols and motifs, and more. 'The Stacks' is where you'll find the templates and worksheets to help you create your characters and setting. There's even an idea generator.
In fact, there's so much information and knowledge in One Stop For Writers that it's worth signing up for a one-month subscription just to cruise around and see it all.
Best app for editing
OK, if you are reading this blog, you probably already know that ProWritingAid is far and away the best app for editing your writing.
Haven't tried it yet? What are you waiting for? It's free to use the online version and it will take your writing to the next level!
Conclusion
There's an app for every kind of writer. It may take a little experimenting to find the right one for your style and comfort level. And you may find that your tastes and needs change the more you write.
If you're interested in learning more about the apps mentioned above, you can find our in-depth review of each here: