![]() ![]() ![]() I haven't tried Fade In, so can't weigh in on that.Įdit: The reason I have WD premium is because I collaborate with people who also have WD. I have both btw, but prefer FD even though WD is a little better at guessing what comes next. Subscriptions trick you into thinking they aren't that expensive, but if you write for two years you've spent 140% more than you would have on FD. For 2, if you're serious about writing you'll probably splurge on the $10/mo subscription (it makes saving and sharing multiple drafts and screenplays much easier) but I'd way rather pay $100 once than have a $10/month account. For one, you need internet access, which is annoying when you're out of the house in a café or library or wherever. Maybe it's because I learned on it, but I'm a fan. I haven't had problems with it in a long time, and it taught me how to format properly. Just want to put in my $0.02 for Final Draft. I just want to write and let the software do its thing. I don’t want to stop and format it every step of the way. I don’t want to act like I’m coding my screenplay. That process itself is just very annoying. Where as, in highland you have to stop and write the character’s name in all caps, which the software recognises as a character name. Which means my thought between one character’s dialogue and the other person’s reaction or dialogue is just unbroken. Then I press enter and then the tab button the next character just shows up. I write one character name then write dialogue. FD is the only thing that gets out of the way and just lets me rip. When you’re writing dialogues, especially a kind of rapid fire dialogue between two people, you just want to write and not stop and worry about formatting. Both feels less intuitive for me than FD. We are always working hard to expand the capabilities of Drafts and keep it up-to-date with the latest technologies.I don’t know why a lot of people here hate FD.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |