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Daily Mac App: WriteRoom

writeroomlogo.jpgIt seems every writer, coder or GTD aficionado has a favorite plain text editor on the Mac these days. For everyone who starts each day with a screenful of untitled TextEdit windows full of different short notes (that would describe my dear spouse, for the record) there's a TextMate guru, an Elements fan, a Scrivener loyalist. It's a golden age for the .txt file.

One of the strongest contenders in the "distraction free writing" category is Hog Bay Software's WriteRoom, which comes in both Mac and iOS flavors. The Mac version saw an update to version 3.0 on Halloween, adding a NaNoWriMo-essential feature: dynamic word counts. Each file now shows a running count, and with a new session tracking engine you can easily track your output to a .csv spreadsheet file.

The new build also adds themed display options, better handling of long documents and Lion-friendly Versions and full screen mode support, in addition to the "classic" blackout approach that hides other active apps. You might not need the full anti-ADHD power of a single-window UI for your writing, so WriteRoom works just fine with traditional document windows.

WriteRoom for Mac is $9.99 whether you pick it up in the Mac App Store or directly from the Hog Bay site. Those who bought it within the last year are entitled to a free upgrade; older licenses (including those received in a previous MacHeist software bundle) are entitled to a half-off discount; you can upgrade for $4.99. Note that WriteRoom 3.0 is 10.7-only, so if you're still on Snow Leopard you'll want to stick with the older versions.

The iOS version of WriteRoom, which of course cooperates nicely with its Mac cousin via Dropbox sync, is available on the iOS App Store for $4.99; it's a superset of Hog Bay's ad-supported PlainText app, with more visual control and other advanced features (disabling autocorrect, extended keyboards, etc.). One compatibility note: the iOS version does not edit .rtf rich text files, but the Mac version can. If you intend to work on your magnum opus from your iPad, stick with basic plain text files.

For myself, I haven't quite found the perfect iPad writing app yet. I love Elements' scratchpad for side notes, while I crave the research power, inboard browser and speedy Markdown formatting of Writing Kit -- but the unchangeable paper background gives me itchy eyes. WriteRoom iOS is among the most comfortable and aesthetically pleasant editors I've tried, though, and for narrative work without a lot of links or Markdown syntax, it's a winner.



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Software Mac

It seems every writer, coder or GTD aficionado has a favorite plain text editor on the Mac these days. For everyone who starts each day...
 

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Warren

'I haven't quite found the perfect iPad writing app yet.'

Notebooks.

Absolutely unbeatable. Best part is that it integrates with Scrivener for the desktop, via DropBox sync.

November 18 2011 at 5:34 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Anh Quang Do

Hi Michael,

Just so you know, the paper background is removed in Writing Kit 2.1 — currently in review.

November 18 2011 at 5:35 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
umijin

Warning! Lion-ONLY!

You need to make certain that you have OSX 10.7, as this version doesn't work in 10.6. I was pretty upset when the autoupdate feature installed v.3 with no warning that it was not compatible with Snow Leopard (unless I overlooked that). And your article should make this clear as well, so that others don't make the same mistake.

November 17 2011 at 10:42 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Bo Shubinsky

The biggest thing keeping me on Word on my Mac is the spelling/grammar check. If they could integrate something as powerful as that, I'd switch in a heartbeat.

November 17 2011 at 3:58 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to Bo Shubinsky's comment
Jesse Grosjean

I'm not sure if functionality is exactly the same as Word, but WriteRoom supports standard OS X spellcheck and grammar check via the Edit > Spelling and Grammar menu.

November 18 2011 at 9:23 AM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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