Blood bowl bbedit
You need something that’s safe enough to chuck around, to get you out of your chair, get the blood flowing, and let you fight writer’s block. Similarly, don’t cheat and get a remote-controlled helicopter.
So, no footballs or basketballs or whatever other insanity you have in mind. Do everyone a favour and don’t be one of those arseholes who throws something that could actually hurt somebody, or break a decent computer (like a Mac). If you’re writing, or indeed doing anything creative at all, you’re going to need something to throw. Be sure to pay particular attention to the corkboard view, which is something you can use to manage the flow and structure of your piece, or at least put up on your screen whenever others are walking by, to look all writer-y. Grab the demo, and take the time to read through the tutorial book it’s a Scrivener project in its own right, of course, and it gives an excellent overview of what the app can do. You can write your book in this, whether it’s fact or fiction. It has as many features for organisation and planning as it does for writing and exporting, and that’s a huge benefit. Scrivener is used by proper writers, who write actual things like novels and screenplays. If I’m not in BBEdit, and I’m still writing, then I’m working on something long and complicated - the kind of project with research and character sheets, scene notes and story arcs, and an optimistically pre-written dedication page.
#Blood bowl bbedit trial#
If that’s not a good enough reason for you to download the trial version, then we probably don’t have very much in common. Invariably, those people are younger than BBEdit. They ask things like “Can BBEdit, just like ?” When I talk about BBEdit, people tend to ask me things about it on Twitter, like I’m actually selling the app myself, or have complete knowledge of its feature-set.
#Blood bowl bbedit code#
I’ll say this: I don’t use a text editor just as a code (or markup) editor, and BBEdit is well-rounded, unobtrusive, lightning-fast, and has been continuously updated since I was twelve years old. It would nice if I could say the same for everything else in life.ĭon’t ask me how it compares to another editor, because I probably don’t know - and to be honest, I’m not very interested in finding out. Almost anything you want it to do, it’ll do quickly, in an unsurprising and sufficiently-configurable manner, then it’ll get the hell out of your way. Its philosophy is essentially “life’s too fucking short for this”. I don’t tend to use it for iOS/Mac coding because Xcode’s editor is serviceable and convenient, nor for very long-form, heavily structured/planned writing (see below), but for everything else, BBEdit is where I’ll be.
It’s $50, and would be cheap at twice the price (which it used to be, as I recall).