Liquid Story Binder
< Next Topic | Back to topic list | Previous Topic >
Posted by Wojciech
Apr 18, 2012 at 04:17 PM
Hi!
Does anybody know whether it supports footnotes/endnotes?
Wojciech
Posted by Pavi
Apr 19, 2012 at 07:33 AM
Hi, I don’t think it does as it was designed for novels, which infrequently use footnotes. I have written here before about using Ultra Recall (or Writing Outliner) with Mendeley or Zotero. However, Liquid Story Binder is a great addition if you write without footnotes/references, and has a LOT of tools. I purchased it for those times I just want to write without distractions, or make a more complex compilation of writing, images, mindmaps, etc.
Best, /Pavi
Wojciech wrote:
>Hi!
>Does anybody know whether it supports footnotes/endnotes?
>Wojciech
Posted by Wojciech
Apr 19, 2012 at 02:21 PM
Thanks, Pavi, it sounds encouragingly. After all, if I need references I can use Harvard style.
Wojciech
Pavi wrote:
>
>Hi, I don’t think it does as it was designed for novels, which infrequently use
>footnotes. I have written here before about using Ultra Recall (or Writing Outliner)
>with Mendeley or Zotero. However, Liquid Story Binder is a great addition if you write
>without footnotes/references, and has a LOT of tools. I purchased it for those times I
>just want to write without distractions, or make a more complex compilation of
>writing, images, mindmaps, etc.
>
>Best, /Pavi
>
>Wojciech wrote:
>>Hi!
>>Does
>anybody know whether it supports footnotes/endnotes?
>>Wojciech
Posted by Joshua Cearley
Jun 9, 2012 at 12:41 PM
You can certainly put the reference markers in the text; however as was mentioned its more drafting software than anything else (Scrivener for Windows only has end-nodes, not footnotes.) Citation managers usually allow you to process an RTF file (Bookends for mac does, Zotero for windows does) so you can export finished text from LSB and either run it through a citation tool; if you want more control you’ll need better citation software or to use a Word/OpenOffice plugin and open it from there. In the case of Scrivener, the developer is very overt that the type of tool both of those apps are is for doing the bulk writing and then tossing in to a word processor for the final touches.
-JC
Wojciech wrote:
>Thanks, Pavi, it sounds encouragingly. After all, if I need references I can use
>Harvard style.
>Wojciech
>