



But this should be no problem if you set a symbol, text, line, etc. The only special thing is that sometimes the details appear above the notes, sometimes the other way around. Result: the Freeplane map appears in Scrivener in the form of a complete tree of documents all text inclusive (in the editor or in the notes). import notes (core, note and details text) as Notes. import notes (core, note and details text) into the Main text (editor) of Scrivener or The result will be the same as above, only faster and without intermediation. Result: the Freeplane map appears in Schrivener in the form of an outline skeleton (tree) of documents (1 document = 1 node)īut, even better than this procedure is that you can also import the Freeplane map direclly as an outline into Scrivener: you simply "Import" your map in Scrivener as "Titles only". (Anyway, the integration between these two programs is much better than FP with LO Writer or MS Words).ġ.Export from Freeplane maps to Scrivener (i.e. It works well when exporting from FP to Scrivener, but less so the other way around.
#SCRIVENER SCAPPLE WINDOWS 8#
There is already a very good integration between Freeplane (Freeplane-Setup-1.3.6_pre07 beta) and Schrivener (1.6.1.0) in Windows 8 (I haven't tried Mac nor Linux ).
