I have yet to try Track Changes in LibreOffice. It appears to have the capability, at least. I hope it's fully compatible.
I sometimes wonder what authors' favorite Star Trek movie and Star Trek series was.
What programs do our resident authors use for their writing?
What programs do our resident authors use for their writing?
It's funny. My more technophile friends sometimes like to point out that there are now computer programs that mimic notepads and index cards and such, and I'm always like, "Or . . . I can just use pencil and paper like I always have."
I have to write in Microsoft Excel, which is as horrid a task as it sounds,
How do you even do thatI find Excel equal parts amazing and mystifying. It can do some great things, if only I can figure out how to use the damn program
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so that if I want to enter a date as, say, 7/9/86, it'll parse it as 1986 instead of 2386, as well as doing other things that prevent a date from displaying the way I want it.
Ha-ha.True. I think people sometimes try to be helpful thinking maybe it will go faster or be easier for you.
I also sometimes suspect that some sci-fi folks, being sci-fi folks, just think doing things a more futuristic way is cooler.
"It's an index card -- but it's a virtual index card!"![]()
if I want to enter a date as, say, 7/9/86, it'll parse it as 1986 instead of 2386, as well as doing other things that prevent a date from displaying the way I want it
I do all my plotting and brainstorming using index cards, legal pads, and sharpened pencils. Plotting a book, or even a chapter, usually begins with me brainstorming with pencil and paper
What are the authors' preferred writing genre(s) and/or subgenre(s), if any? What do authors' find to be easier or more difficult to write? Do professional writers ever write just for fun?
Thank you authors for writing such great stores and taking the time to answer questions!
What programs do our resident authors use for their writing? Since my writing is something I do for fun, I just use the free Micrsoft Word Online, but if I decide to focus on it more, I think I'm gonna want to get something more professional.
Don't know if it may help, but using 'Text' format for relevant cells displays dates exactly as they are entered.
How do you even do thatI find Excel equal parts amazing and mystifying. It can do some great things, if only I can figure out how to use the damn thing
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Pencil and paper are great! Words and ideas seem to be much more creative and flow together more smoothly when physically writing instead of typing. Transcribing them into accepted formats on the other hand...
What are the authors' preferred writing genre(s) and/or subgenre(s), if any? What do authors' find to be easier or more difficult to write? Do professional writers ever write just for fun?
Have you tried ctrl+h-ing the numbers to letters (so 7/9/86 to g/i/hf), then convert to text and re-ctrl+h the letters to numbers? If they're still displaying as 19XX you could copy the dates row into word and use more advanced ctrl+h feature to change 19XX to, for example, 22XX by imputting 19^#^# into the search bar and 22^#^# into the replace bar, (so you'd avoid replacing all the 19ths with 22nds). That should at least be reasonably efficient for the "main" Star Trek centuries; maybe not so much for stories set in the past and the future.That would only work with adding new dates. The problem is that I originally created the spreadsheet in Corel Quattro, and when Excel converted it to its format, it displayed the dates I entered, but when I reset those cells to "Text," it displays them as the raw computer code numbers it uses to represent them in its program. So I'd still have to redo the entire chronology from scratch to fix the problem globally.
Have you tried ctrl+h-ing the numbers to letters (so 7/9/86 to g/i/hf), then convert to text and re-ctrl+h the letters to numbers? If they're still displaying as 19XX you could copy the dates row into word and use more advanced ctrl+h feature to change 19XX to, for example, 22XX by imputting 19^#^# into the search bar and 22^#^# into the replace bar, (so you'd avoid replacing all the 19ths with 22nds). That should at least be reasonably efficient for the "main" Star Trek centuries; maybe not so much for stories set in the past and the future.
What are the authors' preferred writing genre(s) and/or subgenre(s), if any? What do authors' find to be easier or more difficult to write? Do professional writers ever write just for fun?
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