Three Things Scrivener Can Do You Probably Haven’t Thought Of

Whether you’re a Scrivener power user or a beginner, there are a few things Scrivener can do that you probably can’t do without . . . once you know what they are.

Am Researching...with Scrivener | Jann Alexander © 2017
Am Researching…with Scrivener | Jann Alexander © 2017

1. Scrivener can take dictation.

Why this is so sweet for writers who are researching: There’s still a world of great reference material that exists in book form, and you can’t import it as a PDF or a webpage, nor can you copy and paste it into Scrivener. You have to read the books, highlight or post-it note the relevant passages, then type the information into Scrivener. Or do you?

Actually, you can read aloud and let Scrivener do the typing for you: On your Mac, set up Dictation in Keyboard in the System Preferences to look like so. (Click the screenshot for the full details from Apple, including why you may want to select Use Enhanced Dictation.) Then go to a Scrivener text field and set your cursor within it, choosing an insertion point where you’d like your spoken text to start. Hit the Function key twice: Fn Fn (press the Fn key two times). Your Mac will show you a microphone pop-up, and you’re ready to begin speaking.

Set up dictation in Mac OS Sierra
Set up dictation in Mac OS Sierra

How well will it work? You’ll probably need to go back into your dictated text to clean it up a bit, until Dictation gets good at understanding you, and you get the hang of giving commands like New Line, or New Paragraph, or End Quote and so on. You can find all of the commands, including punctuation, typography, formatting, mathematical, and more, at Apple Support. Since I don’t mind reviewing and correcting the dictation text—it reinforces my recall—I don’t think that requires much effort. But your mileage may vary.

How you can lighten your workload even more: Of course, you don’t need to restrict Dictation to your Scrivener Research folder.

  • You can speak dialogue as you write your novel, since your speech may sound more natural than your typed words.
  • You might prefer an ergonomic break from sitting in your chair, since you can dictate while you’re standing or moving around.
  • If you come to love using Dictation, you can dictate commands that let you move around within the Scrivener workspace.
Scrivener takes a memo just like a street scribe ca 1865
Scrivener takes a memo just like a street scribe (ca 1865 Wiki Commons)

Writing tip: Scrivener can take a memo like a street scribe. Tweet: Scrivener can take a memo like a street scribe

2. Scrivener can find the words you overuse.

What makes you think I overuse words? Because I do. Chances are, you do too (unwittingly, of course). You probably have a few favorites you use over and over and over again, to the chagrin of your loved ones. Seems I did, until I began using Scrivener’s Word Frequency function. In fact, the word I seemed to use a lot was . . . seems. Seems I was overdoing it.

How you can check to see if you’re an Uber-User of a few words: It’s easy. With a chapter or scene selected in the Binder, choose Project from the nav bar, then Text Statistics. Click the arrow for Word Frequency to show your word usage.

Are you repeating yourself?
Are you repeating yourself? So? Like, where?

Where your discovery may lead you: Don’t panic if you see forty instances of ‘hers.’ You can disregard pronouns and prepositions. Proper names? Depends; your usage may vary. But if there are some words you’re overusing (given the word count of your chapter or scene), you can do a Search for them and decide what to substitute. Thesaurus.com stands ready to help.

That's a little repetitive
Now that seems a little repetitive (giphy.com)

3. Scrivener can convert web pages into text.

Why this is such a neat trick: Importing web pages into Scrivener is a fantastic feature, and it was so fun that I began dragging sites in with abandon. However, there were some repercussions.

  • Your  Scrivener file can get bloated from all the web weight. (That’s one reason  it takes longer and longer to save.)
  • Websites can remove content over time, and if you’re counting on clicking a link for your information, you might be sadly disappointed to land on a 404 page.
  • You’ve captured the front page of an entire website that you can’t access within Scrivener. Any link you click will take you right on out of your sheltered Scrivener environment—and back to the big, bad web.
  • You’ve also captured a lot of information you don’t need, like “What’s Trending Now” and “From Around the Web,” when all you really need to know is contained in four graphs on the main page.

But you can grab and keep only the info you need: Convert the web page you’ve imported into Scrivener to text. It will reduce Scrivener’s file size, and give you text you can edit, copy, paste, format, whatever you like without leaving the Scrivener shelter.

Not yet convinced about Scrivener?
Read Debunked: Top Five Excuses Writers Give For Not Using Scrivener

How you can convert a web page to text inside Scrivener: Take care when you try this the first time; once you convert a web page to text, you can’t undo it.

  • First, select and duplicate your web page in the Binder.
  • Next, with your duplicate selected, choose Documents from the nav bar, then Convert, and click on Convert Web Page to Text.
  • Finally, clean up your new text page a bit. The photos will be retained, even the links within the converted text, but there will be headers, footers, social media buttons, and more garbage that you don’t need, so just delete those.
  • Optional: Select all of the remaining text and format it to a simpler, smaller font.

Behold a before and after example, using a History Channel web page. One caveat: this trick won’t work for every web page, especially if it is visually rich or complex. (But that’s why you created a duplicate before you began.)

From web page to text: before converting
From web page to text: Before converting

From web page to text: after converting and cleanup
From web page to text: after converting and cleanup

Are you happy with your web-to-text conversion? Doesn’t that photo look a bit large to you? Yep, me too. You can right-click it to scale it down. Now, if you’re pleased with the converted page, move the original web page to the Trash and empty it. Then revel in how much more nimble your Scrivener saves will become, and how easily you can see the important parts of that website—with the ability to add, copy, edit, etc.

Where you’ll find the link to your original website: Never fear, it’s been saved for you, automatically. Look for the link in your Inspector, in the Document References pane, where Scrivener has included it for you. Handy, isn’t it?

The inspector keeps the link handy!
The Inspector’s job: to keep links handy

If you’re a learn-by-doing type, as I am: I’d love to hear how you use Scrivener. I live for discovery, and I love to share. As I keep organizing my research for my historical fiction novel, I’ll keep sharing what I learn. ♣ 

What else can Scrivener do for you that I haven’t thought of?

You can read up on its features and download a free trial of Scrivener HERE (I don’t get a dime, I’m just one of the legions of fans). To celebrate Scrivener’s ten-year anniversary, Literature & Latte is offering a 40% discount until the end of Monday, January 23, 2017. If you decide to purchase Scrivener later, you can frequently find a coupon code for savings.

Jann Alexander's A Habit of Hiding_Book Cover

When I’m not learning Scrivener tricks, I’m writing:

Read an excerpt from A Habit of Hiding

There’s more on the art of writing HERE.


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No Comments

  1. Oh! I didn’t know that it could take dictation! Not that I need it (i’ve never been good at speaking, so telling stories like that, not for me) but it’s interesting to know. Thanks 🙂

  2. Great article! Very helpul indeed. I’ve been searching for some software to do this. If anyone knows how to do it in Windows, the info will be well appreciated.

    1. Sorry to hear Windows doesn’t take a memo the way Mac OS does. It’s a built-in feature of my OS and I’ll note that it improves at translating and recognizing language as it’s used. The more you talk, the better it listens. (Kinda like husbands.) Hope you’ll give it another chance and/or try out a 3rd-party dictation app with it and report back! Thanks for letting the Win users know.

  3. Great information Jann. I do write mostly on Windows, but use my iPad when traveling, so this feature could come in handy if it works on iPad. I think I am importing my web pages incorrectly as all I get is the link and not the actual page.

    1. Nice to hear from you, Chris, hope it works out on your iPad–please let us know! When I import web pages, I drag one into my binder or use the add web page icon at the top of Scrivener; I use Safari on my iMac. It brings up the entire functioning web page. You might try using a different browser to see if it works better, or ask a Windows Scrivener user group for guidance. Hope you figure it out, it’s so handy!

  4. Hi Jann,

    Wonderful tips.

    So, I just looked in my Windows Scrivener…and…rats…no dictation ability. I’m hoping that v3.0 for Windows will have that ability. Fingers crossed.

    In the meantime, I just gave Google Docs Voice Typing a practice try, and I was impressed…it understood me, there were no misspelled words, and it copies perfectly to Scrivener.

  5. I’m pleased Scrivener offers audio transcription, but it often stops long before my recording stops, even through there is no break in the recording. What do I need to do?

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