Laker Posted November 30, 2017 Report Share Posted November 30, 2017 I love the function so much,and really need it. It's magical for me. Could Storyist make it? Thanx a lot, Steve! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Laker Posted December 3, 2017 Author Report Share Posted December 3, 2017 Dear Steve, Are you here? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Laker Posted December 4, 2017 Author Report Share Posted December 4, 2017 Nobody here~~~ Feel so sad. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Laker Posted December 13, 2017 Author Report Share Posted December 13, 2017 hello~~~ Storyist is still living? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
marguerite Posted December 16, 2017 Report Share Posted December 16, 2017 I don't use index cards much, but do you know you can set the colors of the cards in Storyist and track them that way? You can move the cards around on the corkboard as needed or use the colors as a visual identifier. See the attached screen shot. In the left window, the colors separate the months, so all of September is pink, etc. In the right window, the colors identify the POV character (orange=narrator, blue=hero, purple=heroine, yellow=main subplot character who is also the heroine of three other books in the series). Sorry for the slow reply. I thought someone else would answer, because most people use the index cards far more than I do. Best, Marguerite Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Laker Posted January 3, 2018 Author Report Share Posted January 3, 2018 I don't use index cards much, but do you know you can set the colors of the cards in Storyist and track them that way? You can move the cards around on the corkboard as needed or use the colors as a visual identifier. See the attached screen shot. In the left window, the colors separate the months, so all of September is pink, etc. In the right window, the colors identify the POV character (orange=narrator, blue=hero, purple=heroine, yellow=main subplot character who is also the heroine of three other books in the series). Sorry for the slow reply. I thought someone else would answer, because most people use the index cards far more than I do. Best, Marguerite Colored-Cards.jpg Thank you. I know about that you finger out, but arranging index cards along colored plot-lines is another great function. Any way, thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.