
Okay, there is one button left we haven’t talked about, the gear icon button that brings you to the NaviDoc settings in general but we’ll cover them in another article. Remember that if you print notes on facing pages, they will need to be printed on the backside of the page before, so if you open your script you see your script on the right side and you will see the notes that refer to that page on the left page, which is the backside of the page before.
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You can either have Movie Magic Screenwriter prompt you to insert each page that needs to have notes printed for the following page, or, you can insert a whole script, and it will only print notes on the pages where necessary. The second one can print the notes on facing pages of a script that has already been printed and it gives you two options to do that. The first one, which is selected by default, is, the notes will be printed seperately from the script, and they will have reference number so you know to which page they refer. In the upper part, the program asks you how you want your notes to be printed and you have two options to choose from: There you can check and uncheck, which note categories you want to include in the print out. Let’s look at the lower part of the print settings window first. You can go back and re-select them to be shown again anytime. Also, here, if you deselect a note category, the notes of that category will not be deleted. The next button does the same with the script, you can choose, which note categories to display and which to hide. This selection does not influence the notes in your script, it’s just what notes show up here in the NaviDoc on the side. The left most button lets you choose which of the notes categories you want to have displayed in the NaviDoc. Let’s have a quick look at the buttons in the NaviDoc to see what else is there to know. To create a new note, instead of going to the element chooser up top, you can also use the “Add Note Element” dropdown menu at the top of the NaviDoc and choose, which category you want to use for your new note right there. So, from the category section of the NaviDoc where you see this dropdown menu that now says, “Default Note Category”, let’s select the “Feedback” category that we just created.Īnd now if we go back to our script and create a new note element by choosing “Note” from the element chooser up top, we get a “Feedback” category note and we see that it has this organe color that we defined earlier. If we want to create a note of the “feedback” category now we go to another place in the script with the cursor, but before we add a new note element here we need to make sure we tell the program which category it should use for the note.īecause before we only had the default category, now we have two different ones. So, let’s click on the background color chooser and pick orange. Right next to the category name you have these two color fields, the first one is the text color, the second one if the background color. But let’s say, we want that category to be orange. You see that this new category is given a different color by default, so if we like that color there’s nothing left to do. Let’s name that note category, “feedback” for example. In the part of the NaviDoc where it now says, “Default Note Category”, with the text and background colors shown next to the category, let’s click the “plus” button right below to create a new category. So, let’s say, we want to have two different kinds of notes, for example, we want one set of notes that we ourselves put in the script, and we want to have another set of notes that holds feedback from readers.Īnd we want to distinguish the two sets very easily.įor that we’re going to create a new note category. If you take a look at the NaviDoc you see that the note we’ve just created shows up there in the lower part of the window and it gives you a preview of the notes content. This note now has the default category because we haven’t set up any others yet. If you place your cursor somewhere in the script where you want to place a note, and then you go to the screenplay element chooser up top and pick “note”, you see that there is a default note inserted and you can type in whatever you want as the content of your note. That makes using notes in Movie Magic Screenwriter very flexible. What is nice about the Notes in Movie Magic Screenwriter is that you can custom define different types of notes, you can style them differently, in order to distinguish them well in your script, and you can define for each of those notes categories if you want that cagetory to be included in a print out or not. To access the NaviDoc Notes section, make sure the NaviDoc is displayed, by clicking on the NaviDoc button in the lower left corner, and then in the NaviDoc itself, click on the “Notes” section. Movie Magic Screenwriter’s NaviDoc Notes Section
