No offense to Microsoft Word and Apple’s Pages, but neither one had really hit the spot for a go-to Mac word processor for me. Even after years of using Word, drawing a table or making columns seems harder than necessary. And the new Pages is clunky and seems like it wants to hide my saved documents from me.
Download Nisus Writer Pro for Mac to multilingual word processor. Nisus Writer Pro has had 1 update within the past 6 months. Nisus Writer Pro is not yet fully Lion-compliant, so the new instant-on and versioning options are not yet present; I suspect these will come, however, in an incremental update. Nisus Writer Pro also offers a full list of new tools and features in version 2.0. Some, such as Track Changes, are changed enough that, though present in.
I started using Scrivener this summer, but, as Scrivener is the first to acknowledge, that program is not designed for tweaking the layout and final draft of a document. A number of Scrivener users I interact with recommend Nisus Writer Pro.Run program in visual studio.
I’ve been using it regularly for about a month, and see no need to use another word processing program from now on. Nisus Writer Pro is to my word processing what the Kansas City Royals are to baseball right now: fresh, fun, powerful, and totally adept at getting the job done.
It’s a sophisticated program, with a lot of customization options I’ve barely begun to use. But the first time I used it I was able to almost immediately–without even reading the Help!–get my document to do the handful of things I wanted it to do.
So far, like the KC Royals, Nisus Writer Pro has a 1.000 winning percentage with me. Here are 6 things about NWP I really like, one for each of the Royals’ playoff wins as of the time of this post’s being published:
1. The layout is clean and easy to navigate right away
At the very top of the screenshot you’ll see the Word Count in the footer (i.e., of every page). This is easy to set up–the Insert menu gives you the option to insert Automatic Numbers there, one of which is the word count, which I like to have in front of me as I whittle down my weekly sermons to something that will keep all of us awake.
2. Native file format is RTF
This means your NWP documents are fairly universal. You can open aforementioned Word (.docx) documents easily. Pages (.pages) is another story, but I think I’m over it.
One bummer (not Nisus’s fault): finding a good app for iPad that plays nicely with .rtf files is difficult, so I’m still looking for a consistent way to get from iOS to my Dropbox-saved NWP documents. (Textilus has been recommended; I’m working on getting that up and running now.)
3. The customizable palette groups get the job done
Setting up margins, headers, footers, even multiple-columned documents is easy to do via the palettes (the bar on the right of the document above). AND… you can create your own palette, customized with the tasks and functions from the Palette Library that you most use. Here’s one I created:
You can also hide the palette so you’ve just got the document in front of you. Via palettes you control styles, font/formatting, tables, drawing, etc.
4. Bibliography made easy
One of the drop-down menus has an “Activate Bookends” command. There’s some nifty integration between that program and Nisus Writer Pro.
5. Support is strong
NWP’s User Guide clocks in at 500 pages. Yes, I read it all for this review–no, not really. But it’s an invaluable reference. Download it here. The staff I’ve interacted with is really great. And there are active user forums.
6. Nisus Writer Pro is fast
This late 2008 MacBook o’ mine is the little (computer) engine that could. But it’s slowing down. Word and Pages (sorry, Microsoft and Apple! I didn’t intend to use your products as foils) both run sluggishly sometimes on this machine, but Nisus Writer Pro never has. It starts right up, closes right down, and never is glitchy in between.
You can see a lot more of the features of Nisus Writer Pro here, where you can also download a free 15-day trial, while you await Game 3 of Royals vs. Orioles.
The folks at Nisus kindly supplied me with a license of NWP for the purposes of review.
42 Astoundingly Useful Scripts and Automations for the Macintosh
Word Writer Pro
2019 August 23/6:00 AM
Work faster and more reliably. Add actions to the services menu and the menu bar, create drag-and-drop apps to make your Macintosh play music, roll dice, and talk. Create ASCII art from photos. There’s a script for that in 42 Astounding Scripts for the Macintosh.
Amazon•
It’s very rare that I get really excited by software. Remote controlled mouse for cats. The first time was probably for Ashton-Tate’s FullWrite, and that turned out to be a bust—it could create amazing one-page documents, but exceed about ten pages and the Macintosh slowed to a crawl. Hit fifty or sixty pages and you could go out to eat in the time it took to redraw the screen.
Maybe ClarisWorks. Definitely iTunes. Even though it was a reskinned third-party product, it simplified the skin enough that I wasn’t asking “what is this software for?” and used it to listen to music again.
I’ve been using Nisus Writer Pro 2.0 since last year. I started using Nisus at 1.0. If you’ve been paying attention to the Hacks and gaming tools section of my blog, you’ve seen the occasional Nisus script. But I didn’t buy Nisus 1.x because I could program it; I bought it because it made writing easier. It’s rare that its feature set gets in the way of writing as happens in other word processors (*cough* Microsoft Word *cough*). Getting to styles are a single click and they’re set up the same way as formatting the actual text: using styles to format text is just as easy as formatting the text directly, which means I’m no longer tempted to apply formatting to text outside of styles, only to rue it later when I need to change formatting throughout the document.
If you’ve followed my occasional rant about word processors, you’ll know that the one thing that kept me from switching away from Word for a long time was its support for full-document outlines, where the document is the outline and the outline is the document. Nisus Writer Pro got “the document is the outline” in 1.0, and it got “the outline is the document” in 1.2—and it’s much easier to use than my copy of Word’s modal version1. The outline appears as a navigation column to the left of the document window.
When I convert a document from Word to Nisus, I like to take the raw text and reformat it using the strengths of Nisus, rather than just open the Word version in Nisus2. This lets me make sure that all of my formatting is handled with styles (in Word, accessing styles was annoying enough that sometimes I just didn’t bother), and it gives me a chance to proof-read the document again.
Completely reformatting my 100-page Gods & Monsters rulebook from straight text to a fully-formatted version took just a few hours, and that was with beta-version crashes. Today it’s rock-solid, and the resulting PDF that I upload to my web site links to other web pages, links the table of contents, and generates PDF navigation based on the heading levels. This makes the document very easy to read in iBooks on the iPad3, and a lot more useful in general.
Nisus uses “RTF” as its native format; this makes it very easy to send documents to people who use Word. For my personal writing this isn’t important, but at work it is, and it works fine—I’ve literally never had a problem with it.
At version 2.0, Nisus adds floating objects, and they work in a typically well-designed manner. Draw the shape in and you’re done. If you need to adjust the defaults, it’s just a couple of obvious clicks. There are very few modal windows to block your work. The only ones I can recall off-hand are the obvious: Save As… and Open.
Writing is seamless. Really, it’s a snap. There’s no fighting with the word processor just to get it to stop doing unwanted crap, and to do what I need it to do.
Extra credit
If you do need automation, it has a very simple macro system that duplicates every menu item. If you need more, it has simple programming features, and if you need even more, you can drop into Perl.
Here’s a simple, macro-only automation tool I used in a document that had a lot of tables, where I was converting from old tab-delimited text tables:
Table:Convert To Table
Select Start
Table:Select:Rows
Format:Paragraph Style:Table Header
Table:Select:Table
All it does is convert the selected text to a table, and then apply a special style to the top row of the table. Then it selects the entire table for further customization. It saves time in a document with a lot of text that needs to be changed into tables.
And here’s another simple macro that uses a single conditional and which remembers whether the window is showing the full page width or not:
[toggle code]
#Make the document window display at the same size it would be printed
Menu “Page View”
#Remember if Show Page Width is turned on
$showPageWidth = Menu State “Show Page Width”
#Set the zoom to be the same as print
#27.5-inch iMac Intel
Set Zoom 152
#zoom so that the width of the document window shows the page
Menu “Zoom”
#restore show page width if it had been on before; the paper-like zoom should remain
If $showPageWidth
Menu “Show Page Width”
End
All it does is set the zoom; it sets it to be the same size as paper would be if I held a sheet in front of the screen, without my having to actually do that and eyeball it.
Whenever I find myself doing the same thing over and over, I just list the menu items I’m doing and I have the macro right there.
That said, I can’t overstate that you never need to know this: Nisus is well-designed even without all of the macro stuff. I recommend downloading the demo to see if it fits your work style!
Note that I assume Word has improved since I last bought a copy; this is not a comparison between today’s Word: since buying Nisus in February of 2008, I have never felt a need to purchase Word.
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Converting directly from Word also works fine. I’ve done that for some older documents that I don’t want to deal with updating, but just want in Nisus so that it’s easier to put it online.
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It also supports exporting to ePub, but I haven’t experimented much with this other than to verify that it works.
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A Brief History of ClarisWorks: Bob Hearn at Robert Aubrey Hearn
“Of course, a lot of this kind of stuff is old hat today, but it was new and exciting in 1989.” ClarisWorks was easy to use, produced great documents, and was the first truly multi-media presentation tool I used. I continued using it (as AppleWorks) long after it was discontinued, because nothing beat it for ease of writing and ease of drawing.
FullWrite Professional
FullWrite Professional was a good example of good intentions and poor design. It could create some beautiful documents—if you were willing to type one letter every few seconds, and wait several minutes for screen updates every time a formatting change was made.
Gods & Monsters
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Hacks
Articles about programming in Python, Perl, Swift, BASIC, and whatever else I happen to feel like hacking at.
iTunes
“The best digital jukebox, with the #1 music download store inside.”
Nisus
I use Nisus Writer Pro for almost all of my new documents now. It’s a lot easier to use than the other word processors I’ve tried.
More Nisus
Free Novel Writing Software For Windows 10
Importing an index into Nisus
Nisus makes it very easy to import an externally-generated index into a document.
Text to image filter for Smashwords conversions
Smashwords has very strange requirements for ebooks. This script is what I use to convert books to .doc format for Smashwords, including converting tables to images.
Nisus HTML script now handles floating content
My Nisus simple HTML publish script now handles floating images and floating text boxes.
Lulu, Nisus, and Gods & Monsters
Lulu is sometimes really annoying. But they usually get the job done. Nisus, on the other hand, is rarely annoying to use and always gets the job done.
Automatically grab flavor text snippets in Nisus
In Nisus, it is very easy to grab all text of a specific style, and its nearest heading. This makes it easy to make “room description cards” for handing to the players after reading them.
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Discretely and with quiet strength: the Underwood Champion Portable
The ultimate distraction-free writing app is a typewriter.
The Levenger Ambi Folio
One of the best writing purchases I’ve made has been the Levenger Ambi Folio. It’s been a near-constant companion when I go out to write.
The Fisher Space Pen
If you’re a writer, you’re a writer everywhere—often trying to write on whatever semi-hard surface is available. The Fisher Space Pen makes that possible.
ia Writer for iOS and Mac OS
You have to enjoy using asterisks and/or underscores for emphasis, and hashes for headlines, but if you do, ia Writer is a great app for writing and note-taking on Mac OS and iOS.
A tale of two keyboards: iwerkz and Logitech K760
Several months ago I replaced an aging Apple wireless keyboard with a Logitech K760 solar keyboard and an iwerkz portable folding keyboard. Both of these bluetooth keyboards do great in their intended purpose.
One more page with the topic writing tools, and other related pages