I've always been one of those people who refused to write more than one project at a time. While I was getting my Masters, that made a helluva lot of sense. I had SERIOUS deadlines that I had to fulfill, and a project to finish
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Hey Shara. This is a random comment, but we were talking about this awhile ago and I just figured it out, so I thought I'd come over here and leave you a note. You mentioned having difficulty exporting an entire project from Scrivener as a single file. I'm getting my novel parts out to test readers and have needed to figure out how to do this -- I'd been doing it manually before. What you need to do is select File -> Compile Draft, down at the bottom. It allows you to pick all of the files from the project that you want to include in the draft, and then it spits out the whole thing in the file format you prefer -- RTF, DOC, even open office ODT. It's very cool, because it allows you to turn parts of the file on and off by clicking checkboxes, so you could easily include or exclude various parts of the same project
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Thanks for the comment, but that wasn't exactly what I was having trouble with. My problem is once I export the document, it doesn't show up the way it's supposed to. Line breaks are missing that exist in Scrivener, that sort of thing. It's very frustrating. :-/
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