13 Writing Tools That Come With Your Mac

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Hi, this is Gary with MacMost.com.  Today let's look at the writing   tools that are already installed on your Mac.  MacMost is brought to you thanks to a great  group of more than 1000 supporters. Go to   MacMost.com/patreon. There you can read  more about the Patreon Campaign. Join us   and get exclusive content and course discounts. So one of the most common things people use their  Macs for is writing and there are a lot of great   writing tools on your Mac. Whether you're writing  an essay for school, a report for work, or the   next great novel you can use these tools to make  your writing better. Let's start off with the most   basic one which is, of course, Spell Checking.  There are actually several different types of   spell checking on your Mac. As you type text you  get Auto Corrections. You can also Auto Complete   words and of course you can use the built-in spell  checker. It will highlight words that it thinks   are misspelled but you can also manually use the  spell checker to check your words afterwards.   So notice there when I misspelled brown it   underlines it in red really quickly and then  autocorrected it. It kept it underlined in   blue to draw my attention to the fact that  the word was changed from what I typed.   Now notice here I've mistyped the word but I  haven't hit the space yet. It's going to give me   suggestions underneath. Now it's automatically  going to change to those suggestions or I can   click it to accept the suggestion or hit the  X if I want to keep the word even though it   thinks it's misspelled. I'll just hit the  space here to have it automatically change. Now here I'm going to autocomplete a word by  using the F5 key on my keyboard. You may need   to use the fn key in conjunction with the F5 key  depending upon your settings. When I do this I   get a list of words and I can use the down arrow  to go to the correct one. Then simply hit Space   or Return and will accept it and even put a  space afterwards. Now you've got Settings for   these under the Edit Menu. They are different  for different apps. So here in Settings I've   got Settings set to Check Spelling While Typing  which is what I was experiencing with the red   and blue underlines there and Correct Spelling  Automatically which was changing things   even if I didn't click on the word that was there.  You could also Check Document Now. If you've got   these turned Off you can use Check Document Now  to go through it or Show Spelling and Grammar   which will bring up this little Control here and  allow you to go through any errors it detects. Now   notice there's also Check Grammar here. You've got  a setting here under Edit, Spelling and Grammar,   to Check Grammar with Spelling. So you have  to have Check Spelling while typing turned on   and then Check Grammar with Spelling to also  have Grammar checked while you're writing. Now the grammar checker built into macOS isn't  as good as you would think. It doesn't really   catch many grammar mistakes. So watch if I type  something like this. So here you can see it didn't   catch any grammar errors. I can force one, let's  make that a lower case r there and then we put   a dash there and then you'll see I've got two  grammar errors here but one is a capitalization   error and one is a punctuation error. So if  I go to Edit, and then Spelling and Grammar,   Show Spelling and Grammar you could see it  highlights the first one here and tells me that   the r should be capitalized and I can make that  correction. It also tells me to consider an m-   instead of a n- here. So it catches some things  but not others. It is not nearly as good as   some third party tools that look a lot more  in-depth into the grammar of each sentence. Now one of the things you need to do for writing  sometimes is create outlines and you can do that   in Pages. If you use the Template Chooser here  in Pages under Basic there's a Note Taking   Template which is basically an outline  template. So you can use this template   to create an outline to base your writing on. Now an even better tool for creating outlines is   Keynote. Yes, Keynote is a presentation tool  but you can use it for outlines. For instance   let's go in here and use a basic white theme and I  could create slides that could contain information   on them. It's kind of like using index cards to  organize your thoughts before writing something.   So, for instance, I'll use Title and Bullets  here and maybe I want to create a card for   each chapter or maybe one for each character. So  something like this. I could create a bunch more.   With these character cards here it's easy to  rearrange them as you like in the sidebar there.   You could also change to Light Table and then  you could see representations of each card. You   can even enlarge them to make it easier to read  and you could rearrange them like that. You can   link from one card to another. So, for instance,  here I could create a link to another slide here   and even, of course, print these out if you really  want to. There's also an outline mode here as well   so you could see everything here as an outline  and sometimes it's a lot easier to edit. You can   actually change the text right here. So  creating all these cards in outline mode   here on the left you can expand this to take  up some more space and then when you're done   with it going to the Light Table mode to be  able to move those around and quickly refer   to the information in those cards. It an  be useful as a writer. It definitely is a   technique a lot of writers use but with physical  cards. Here you can do it right on your Mac. Also there's the Reminders and Notes apps.  So the Reminders app, you may think it's more   for a To Do list or adding timed alerts that  pop-up to remind you of something. But you can   use it to create lists. So you can use it for  character ideas, plot ideas, all sorts of things.   You can put them in the Reminders app as a list  of things and you could also use the Notes app for   the same thing. You could create a list there  or a table if you want or just any format for   Notes and things. It's great because it  will also be with you, thanks to iCloud,   on your iPhone so you can add to the Notes or  Reminder's lists whenever inspiration hits you. So you also, of course, have a full Dictionary  app on your Mac. Dictionary is, of course,   a very useful tool for writers. So you can  use the Dictionary tool to look up words   and get definitions to figure out  whether or not that's the right   word. But the Dictionary app also has a few  other useful things. There is the Thesaurus   and also Wikipedia. Wikipedia is very useful as  well for spelling of names of places and people   and events. Also for looking up information to  make sure you get facts right. You can also use   the Dictionary information right inside of Pages  and other writing apps. So, for instance, you want   to look something up you can select it and Control  click on it, two-finger click on the trackpad or   right click on your mouse, and then use Lookup or  you can use the keyboard shortcut, Control Command   D, and it brings up the Dictionary. In many cases  you also get the Thesaurus here. So, for instance,   this word here should give us, yes, Thesaurus.  Then you get to pick different words. Very useful   for writing. Also notice Wikipedia is available.  So, for instance, you can select something like   this. If you want to get more information  about it to add more color to your writing   you can bring it up. You could see here this comes  right up with Siri Knowledge which comes from   Wikipedia so you get information right in here  without having to go to the web and search for it. It's also important to get a Distraction-Free  writing environment. Pages can help you with   that. So here you could go to Full Screen  Mode and now it takes up full screen. I can,   of course, turn off the sidebar. I can turn off  the thumbnails. Go to Document Only. I could even   turn off the Toolbar and really get things down to  just an environment like this. Also you may want   to switch using Control Center to Dark Mode. Of  course that won't really change your text here.   You've got a white background with black text.  But of course you can always make the text of your   document white and background black or some other  combination of colors if you really wanted to. Pages also has some great editing tools,  ones that you could use either on your own   or when you're collaborating with somebody.  So, for instance, say I wanted to add a   note. I can do that using the Comment button up  here. That will create this comment. I could add   whatever I want. Maybe a note for later on. I  could change the left sidebar here to include   Comments and you could see I've got that comment  there and I'll see whatever comments are on the   current page. Once I add a Comment I get Comment  and Highlight here so I could actually select   something and highlight it. That will also allow  me to add a Comment but I don't necessarily need   to so I can just kind of save that for later on.  Now if I'm collaborating with someone that's also   very useful and their name would appear next to  whatever comment or highlight they would leave.   So if I'm writing with somebody they could leave  a note for me. I could leave a note for them.   Also if I'm writing and somebody else is going to  be editing what I'm writing they can see my notes,   they can add notes that I can see, and  make changes based on what they say. But for serious editing there's also Change  Tracking. You can see here Track Changes   and you can turn it on and you can turn it  off. It's also under Edit, Track Changes.   What happens here is whenever you make a change  it's not permanently in there. So, for instance,   I can delete a word and you could see the word  is crossed out and there's a change here. I can   accept it or reject it because somebody editing  my text doesn't necessarily need to make changes,   changes I may not know are there. They can turn  on Tracking and then make the changes and I can   go through and accept or reject or decide to  reject and then make my own change if I want. All of this really works well if you decide to  collaborate with somebody using iCloud. So I   click here and then start collaborating. I can  add people using their Apple ID or just anybody   with a link. Even if they're not using a Mac they  could use iCloud.com and there's a Pages Web App   there which they can use on any web browser. They  can have permission to make changes or View Only.   I can send them the link by Messages, Copy it  and send it to them some other way or email it.   They can work on the document at the same  time I'm working on the document or I could   write one day and they could edit another day.  Anyway you want to work it you can have multiple   people working on the same document whether it's  multiple writers or writer and several editors. Now another thing you could do is you can export  as a PDF and let somebody annotate a PDF. So here   I can export to PDF and then using Preview you can  annotate in Preview as well. So I can turn on the   Annotation tools and you could add all sorts of  things. Textboxes, circles, lines, highlights, and   these will all be saved in the PDF. So if you'd  rather not give somebody your Pages document or   using another word processor or something you  could always export as a PDF or print as a PDF,   give them the PDF. They can automatically use  Preview to mark it up and give the PDF back   to you and then you could go through that  and make changes to your original document. Another tool you've got, of course, is Dictation.  You don't have to type everything. You can   actually speak to your Mac and have it take  dictation for you. There are two different ways   to do that. One is in System Preferences under  Keyboard you can go to Dictation and turn that On.   Then use the keyboard shortcut, I'm  going to use Press Control Key twice,   and this is very simple dictation. (The  quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog   period). The idea is maybe you do one sentence  at a time or a paragraph at a time with this. But   you've got the more complex kind of dictation.  I'll go ahead and turn Off this dictation here   and instead go to Accessibility and Voice  Control. With Voice Control you've got a lot   more that you can do. First of all you've  got a lot of commands that you could use.   Not only commands to navigate around but things  that you could use already texted. For instance,   typing letters, selecting text, leadiing text,  changing text, all sorts of things. This also   works really well to combine typing and speaking.  So you could type somethings, speak some others,   without having to turn things on or off. You can  also have your own vocabulary list to this so you   can add things that you use all the time, maybe  having to do with your topic or just names and   things like that. This works really well, (The  quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog period   And this is yet another sentence period). So you  can see how I can combine typing and speaking. Now another thing you may want to do while you're  writing is to hear something back to you. Like you   write a paragraph or a page and you kind of want  to hear it back to listen to it. So you can select   Text. You can Control click, two-finger click on  a trackpad, or right click on a mouse. Use Speech   and Start Speaking. This is also available under  Edit and then Speech, Start Speaking. Now this   functionality has been built into macOS for a long  time and it's kind of old. It uses old voices and   things like that. There's actually a new way to  do this. If you go to System Preferences and then   back to Accessibility and then to Spoken Content  you can turn on Speak Selection. You could then   choose the Siri voice that you want to use  and you can change the speaking rate. You can   select Options for it and you could see here  there's a keyboard shortcut, Option Escape.   It will even highlight things as they're spoken.  So this one, I think, works a lot better.   You can even see the controls that were there.  So once you have enabled that it's really easy   to do Option Escape with anything you've selected.  Kind of hear it back to see if it sounds right.   Using those more advanced Siri voices does make  it sound a little bit more natural so you can   hear what you're writing and then  maybe make changes based on that. So if you use your Mac for writing  hopefully you know about some of these tools   but maybe I showed you some new ones  you could use. Thanks for watching.
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Channel: macmostvideo
Views: 23,892
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: mac writing apps, mac writing tools, mac outlining tools, how to write on your mac, best apps for writing, mac apps for productivity, mac spell check, mac autocomplete, mac grammar, mac outlining, outlining on the mac, mac writing cards
Id: tr7it2kmYAU
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Length: 14min 5sec (845 seconds)
Published: Thu Jun 03 2021
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