


Thanks to highlighting, you can always tell where you are in the text.Īs you move the pointer to the top of the screen, a menubar appears that has all the possible functions. The Spartan landscape is disrupted by neither a menubar nor a frame, and you can start writing immediately without distraction.įigure 1: FocusWriter starts in full-screen mode by default and hides everything else. In medias resĪfter starting FocusWriter, you'll see only a gray background and a blinking cursor ( Figure 1). One of these tools is FocusWriter, the work of Graeme Gott, which can be installed easily from the Software Center. The idea is to format the text later in another program or hand it over to someone else to perform the layout. The functions are reduced to a bare minimum. The author sees only the empty page and the rest disappears into the background. They bring the old empty page metaphor back to life by opening a page in full-screen mode and eliminating everything else. Tools for "distraction-free writing" can help remedy this situation. For example, as soon as you're engrossed in your work, an IM comes across from one of your pals or the operating system notifies you of six urgent software upgrades. Moreover, many can do without tables of contents, headers and footers, and like elements and consider toolbars and layout-based work a distraction from what's most essential: writing.Įven if you do manage to concentrate on the text, system messages and other invasive events can distract you from your text creation.
THINGS LIKE FOCUSWRITER FULL
However, many users do not take full advantage of all the word processing tools that are available. Thanks to extensive formatting functions and embedded tables and graphics, anyone can create beautiful and informative documents one way or another, and word processing seems like incredible progress compared with the pen or typewriter. Word processing used to be the authoring tool par excellence.
