Kindle: UK, US, Australia, Canada (and all other Kindle stores) - no DRM.(No, I’m not interested in trying L AT EX.) Next - see if Zotero in LibreOffice is less painful, at least for doing multiply-anchored footnotes. I first went “ick” at Scrivener ‘cos the actual word processor is not great - I’ve been spoilt by LibreOffice Writer, which is awesome - but not being able to do multiply-anchored footnotes without ridiculous workarounds is a hard fail.
Macintosh Scrivener can apparently do multiply-anchored footnotes - but the Windows version is a legacy leftover that gets occasional patches.
If you do this in LibreOffice or Word, it creates a duplicate footnote - I’m at a loss as to when this would ever be the right thing to do. This is disconcertingly terrible when I’m used to the Wikipedia visual editor - if you cut’n’paste a reference anchor on Wikipedia, it creates a second anchor to the same reference, which is pretty much always what you want. LibreOffice does multiply-anchored footnotes using a kludgy cross-reference mechanism - same as Microsoft Word. The real dealbreaker is that Scrivener cannot do footnotes with multiple anchors - where one footnote (or endnote) is referred to several times, with the same number anchoring it in the text. LibreOffice’s fallback font for Chinese characters is Noto Sans CJK SC Regular.) The font above is Microsoft’s 1990s take on Monotype Garamond, which used to come with Microsoft Office - though Microsoft forgot to include the bold italic.
(LibreOffice renders fonts with HarfBuzz - like anything sensible does - and does fallback with fontconfig or its built-in font list. Scrivener can’t do multiple anchors to a footnote, Wine‘s font rendering is awful, Scrivener doesn’t do font fallback for missing Unicode characters - and its inline footnote display is eye-bleeding. So I’d say you should definitely try it - but I’m not a fan. I could really do with something more like an IDE for writing - which is precisely what Scrivener promises.Ī lot of people I know love Scrivener and wouldn’t do without it.
I have a folder full of LibreOffice documents, and it’s getting unwieldy.