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Topic : LaTex + version control writing package This should be probably cross-posted to tex.stackexchange.com. However, since my question is more oriented towards writers who also have a firm grasp of - selfpublishingguru.com

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This should be probably cross-posted to tex.stackexchange.com. However, since my question is more oriented towards writers who also have a firm grasp of technology, I'm posting it here in hopes of getting a better answer. (I hope the collaboration part won't stir up a hornets' nest, it's merely meant to facilitate discussion.

LaTex provides a really good document preparation system, but the specifics can be a bit stiff for newbies to learn. Similarly, UNIX tools like git, etc. provide a good form of version control for something like a novel (This concept has been already explored in Flashbake - bitbucketlabs.net/flashbake/)
I was wondering whether there was a tool that combines both of these with a newbie-accessible frontend, so an author can generate the complete manuscript of his work whenever needed, and rollback if needed as well. Is there such a tool in production; or have people on this board ever thought of making one?


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I've been using Celtx for writing screenplays, since it takes care of all of those messy formatting details. And it's free.

I had to manually incorporate version control in my writing process, since it doesn't appear that Celtx is capable of version control at this time. I use mercurial for version control. Every time I commit changes to the repository, I export a separate text version of the document and check it in alongside the original file. The text document is the version which I use to diff against, since the diff tool won't recognize the Celtx format.

It's a hack of a solution, but it works for me. Hope that helps.


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I've been playing around with Scrivener (for Windows) for a few days now because of * ahem * Lauren Ipsum's almost evangelical zeal regarding the product ; I must admit I'm quite impressed with it so far, and am seriously considering using it permanently.

Scrivener 2 does have a form of version control in the form of "Snapshots". I haven't used it as yet, but it is available in the Windows version. From the blurb on their website:

Take a snapshot of the document before
you embark on an edit or major rewrite
and you can always roll back to the
previous. This is a much more complete
version control as compared to the
collaboration tools you find in other
text editors. You can actually saving
the whole document rather than just
tracking changes.

Since I've just started with Scrivener, I can honestly say it's been very, very easy to grasp and use (spent about 5 minutes just having a look at the introductory video, and off I went). Definitely easy for newbies to grasp immediately.

Generating the manuscript when you're ready appears to be very straight forward, too, and you can also send it to different formats (PDF, Word .doc and .docx, printer, .odt ...).

I must say, I've found it very useful, easy to use, and a great way to help you structure and plan your work. One nice thing about it is that it's not cluttered with things I don't actually need.

I'm still trying it out, but so far, thumbs up, and would recommend it.


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