

Now here comes the part where copyholders come into place. Select Open in Other Editor and this is what you get: Now let’s try looking at two documents from Bookmarks side-by-side. Let’s take a looksy at what the screen looks when I select Open in Other Editor: Now I can pretty much see what the document file shows and can keep reading by using the scroll bar, but I want to see what other options I have for viewing. I’ve expanded the Bookmarks area by hovering over the edge with my cursor and dragging it over towards the Corkboard. The lined text is a document, the globe a website, the red and white file is a PDF, an image a photo and the Preview icon is the now default for PDFs. Here’s what I’m working with:Ī few things to note: each of the icons represents its format. In this section, I have notes I created, an image I saved in my gallery of visuals I created for inspiration, and three PDFs, links fron DevonThink Pro or saved in a file on my hard drive, and a website. To get to Project Bookmarks, just toggle the up and down arrows in the header. I created my bookmarks under Project Bookmarks. And let me quote Christopher Walken’s character in The Continental “Wowee, wow, wow.” But, I will go into detail with lots of pictures of all the viewing options. The concept is similar to the bookmarks you create on your browser, but in this case-like References-you can create bookmarks from websites, internally from your Scrivener project, from other programs that support internal links (DevonThink Pro, for example), and from your hard drive.įor this tutorial, I won’t get into the step-by-step process of creating each of these bookmarks because if you used References in the past you can figure it out pretty quickly. If you’re not in the know, Bookmarks replaced References. And so, here I am to show you (and to play around with it some more while I procrastinate to take the dogs out). I was so impressed at what it’s capable of doing that I wanted to use it immediately.
#Devonthink pro multiple labels how to#
Specifically, how to view each of the documents. As a preview, I thought I’d show you some neat tricks of this new feature.

I plan to sell it on this site sometime in the near future (I’m constantly tweaking the images and format).

I’m in the process of writing the 31 Days of Scrivener Workbook.This is the same course I teach to various groups and individuals.
