![]() ![]() ![]() To the right of “Where:” choose “Browse” and find where you want to save your Scrivener projects. From the toolbar choose File > New Project… > Blank (or Fiction, etc.)Ģ. Designating Where Scrivener for Windows Saves Your Working Copiesġ. So pay attention the next time you create a new project, and be sure you’re saving it where you can find it again. You can read about this in Section 7.2 Creating a New Project in the Scrivener 1.7 for Microsoft Windows Users Manual.īy default, the location where Scrivener saves is usually somewhere on your hard drive in a documents folder, but lately I’ve noticed that Microsoft Windows keeps trying to set the default of different software to their cloud service. So with this particular name, there’s only going to be one copy - your working copy - which you save on top of every time you save. ![]() (Oh, who are we kidding? Everyone used Microsoft Word.) And it’s going to be saved directly over your old file, just like if you had used File>Save or Ctrl + S in your old word processor. This is also the place where Scrivener auto-saves every time your Scrivener screen goes idle for 2 seconds. Scrivener saves your project working copies to where you designate when you first create it. But if you were overwhelmed by all of Scrivener’s features and didn’t pay much attention when you created your first project, you might not have paid attention to where your files were being saved. Where does Scrivener for Windows save files – your working copies? ![]()
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