pages formats and yes, I know that’s unrealistic for many, many reasons, but I can still wish, can’t I?)Īt this stage, lest this comes across as an advert for Final Draft, I should say that we are in partnership with Final Draft Inc. pages format a little later, but for now, suffice to say that I wish Microsoft and Apple had come up with a format as nice as. You can open it up in any text editor and it is easily readable. (The FDX format is something I’m not used to - a good XML format. Scrivener 2.0’s support for FDX will be even more advanced, allowing users to keep synopses (summaries in Final Draft) and structure intact when transferring files between the programs, but for now, Scrivener 1.5x’s FDX support is already great for getting your work out to Final Draft. fdx import and export FDX (Final Draft XML) is Final Draft’s new default format, replacing FDR. fcf (Final Draft File Converter Format) export, making it relatively straightforward for users to export to previous versions of Final Draft, but the most recent updates - 1.5x onwards - also include.
With the help of the nice people at Final Draft, a recent update to Scrivener introduced.
But Scrivener isn’t a dedicated scriptwriting program and most scriptwriters will still need such software for preparing their script for submission or production, so it’s great to see a much anticipated Final Draft update prove worth the wait. Because of those early pleas, Scrivener now has a scriptwriting mode, and I’m glad it does, as I like using it for playing around with dialogue and other formats myself (not to mention that my most recent endeavour in my never ending quest not to finish a work of fiction is a graphic novel, or comic, or something).
When Scrivener was in the early beta stages a few years ago, there were a number of frustrated Final Draft users who, wanting more organisational tools than Final Draft provided (and to be able to use something more “Mac-like”), asked me to provide scriptwriting features in Scrivener so that scriptwriters, too - along with writers of other types of prose - could draft and structure in Scrivener and then export to Final Draft for the - er - final draft (and production and so on). I won’t go into the various new features - navigator, improved index card navigation, new interface, and so on - here instead, I just thought I’d say a few words about Final Draft’s relationship with Scrivener.
Final Draft is, of course, the industry standard of scriptwriting programs, and version 8 brings with it a raft of new features and an overhaul to the interface that makes it feel much more like a native Mac app than previous versions. For all those scriptwriters out there, and for all those who don’t already know, Final Draft 8 was finally released not long ago.