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ManuscriptCurrent Version: 1.2.2 (iOS 4.0 Tested)

Supports iOS4!

"Manuscript Makes Mobile Writing Nearly Perfect"
The iPhone App Review
(theiphoneappreview.com)

Featured on Apple's "New and Noteworthy" (02-FEB-2010)

*** CURRENT VERSION ***

Manusript 1.2.1 is now live:

* Word count and page count on the Manuscript list screen.

* Dropbox support.

* Users are now able to convert any textual document to a format that Manuscript recognizes and imports. Simply follow these simple guidelines and your Dropbox textual document will become an editable Manuscript on your iPhone:

1. First line in your Dropbox document will become the Manuscript name

2. Second line will become the author name

3. Chapter titles start with a number then a dot, for example: "1. First Chapter".

4. Typing =+=+= before each chapter title will signify it is a chapter title. There is no need to type those characters before the first chapter.



For a template TXT file, please check our website at www.blackmana.com

*** WHAT IS MANUSCRIPT ***

Manuscript is a writing application that lets you outline, research, edit and export anywhere between a short story and an entire book - right on your iPhone!

Manuscript is not limited to writing stories – you can use it for note-taking, project management, storyboard and much more.

* Create a manuscript from scratch or import from Dropbox.

* Outline your manuscript using multiple levels:

Pitch – One sentence tagline.

Synopsis – A more elaborate description of the plot or article, covering major developments.

Index cards – Serves as a repository for ideas, character development, reminders and more.

* On top of Pitch and Synopsis, each chapter can be outlined individually. You can create empty chapters, outline them, and then pour content into them in any order you like.

* Use Wikipedia, dictionary and thesaurus from within the app.

* Backup your work-in-progress or export your finished manuscript to Dropbox as an RTF,TXT or HTML file that can be read by both Mac and PC.

NOTE: When you create a new chapter, the text field under the chapter name is an OUTLINE, not the chapter textual contents. To actually write the chapter content, close the new chapter screen, get out of edit mode, and click on the chapter you want to edit.
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Manuscript Screenshots


Manuscript Review

Creative writing toolbox provides decent functionality, with some limits

Manuscript is a creative writing toolbox from Black Mana Studios that enables you to outline, take notes, research, and write on your iPhone or iPod touch. The $4 app also lets you, in a limited fashion, import and export your work to Google Docs or to your e-mail account. The tools themselves are well thought out and provide lots of functionality for writers on the go.


Look It Up: You can perform basic research, including looking things up on Wikipedia, without leaving Manuscript.

Manuscript’s biggest drawback becomes clear when, after launching, you’re greeted with a file-free “library” (the list of manuscripts you’re working on) and two possible options—to create a new manuscript, or to import a Google Docs document (as opposed to a Google Docs spreadsheet or presentation, for example). If you don’t already have a Google account, the app provides a button that, when pressed, takes you into Safari to Google’s account creation page.

However, after you import a Google Docs document, you may discover that there’s nothing there, except the file’s original title and some empty HTML tags. That’s because you can only import some Google documents. What types of Google documents Manuscript can import successfully is neither easy to figure out nor easy to explain. You can sometimes export Manuscript files to Google Docs and then re-import them to Manuscript (depending on how you choose to export the file and whether you’re using the new or old version of Google documents, and apparently other variables), and changes, additions, and deletions you’ve made in Google Docs will stick—if you are able to download the document successfully.

In the developer’s defense, it does say that exporting to Google Docs is “for backup purposes only.” But the developer adds that you can import “any textual document to a format that Manuscript recognizes and imports.” This may be true, but Black Mana has done a poor—or less than thorough—job of explaining how to accomplish this. Repeated attempts to do this following the simple instructions at the company’s Website did not work.

You also can export Manuscript files to your e-mail account. In neither case can the process be automated—if you want backups, you’ll have to do it manually, every time.

Manuscript shines when it comes to helping writers jot down random thoughts and ideals (via “notecards”), organize a single manuscript into chapters (which are exported as a complete, linked document), and perform basic research. You can also create a short “pitch,” and a longer-form “synopsis,” to keep track of where you’ve been and where you’re going with your document. From within the app, you can select any word or phrase, and choose to look it up in a built-in dictionary/thesaurus, on Wikipedia (also integrated into the app), or via Google. In the latter case, you exit from Manuscript, as Safari automatically opens and performs the search.

The app taps into the iPhone OS’s cut, copy, and paste capability when using the research resources; it is quick and convenient to look something up in Wikipedia, find text you want to use in your document or on a notecard, and copy and paste it in.


Write Away: The basic writing screen in Manuscript offers a pull-down menu that provides access to the app’s research features and also to your notecards.

Manuscript also provides writers with a variety of basic—but good—default options. You can select from two different font styles in either 12- or 14-point type, choose whether you want to lock the app in landscape or portrait mode (or not), and pick the paper output size as either letter or A4.

If you like to (or must) write long documents on your mobile device, Manuscript is an option worth considering. However, it doesn’t provide basic formatting options—like the ability to use bold or italics, or to indent long passages, for example. And its import and export capabilities—which the developer says it plans to expand in future versions—are both limited and quirky.

Other important elements of the app work very well and are about as integrated as the current iPhone OS allows. It will be especially interesting to see how this—and other apps for serious writers—are adapted to take advantage of the iPad.

[Jeff Merron is a freelance writer and editor living in North Carolina.]

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