

Useful FeaturesįocusWriter has a nice set of features that measure up well against the typical settings and options available in other word processors such as Abiword. If it is available in version 1.3.3 of the Linux package, it is so well hidden that it might as well not be there at all.
#FOCUSWRITER TUMBLR WINDOWS#
Maybe it does in the OSX and Windows versions of this application. The documentation claims that setting exists. Just add a setting to adjust the size of the writing area. It is counterproductive to have a box in which to write that is centered on an otherwise wasted screen.Ī fix would be simple. But on my 21-inch diagonal monitor, staring at huge wide borders is a big disappointment.

This is not much of a problem on smaller monitors and small-screen laptops. The panels that hide when not needed work as advertised, but the interface is mostly wasted with its wide blank borders that frame a much smaller display space for the words you create. FocusWriter delivers something much less. The idea of having a full-screen view to create words on a page is an empty promise, unfortunately. When you do not need to see them, all you see is the writing on the screen. All the interface frills stay out of sight until you need to navigate through them. FocusWriter provides the best of two worlds. Moving the mouse to the top or bottom edges of the screen accesses the more traditional icon rows and menus of tools. You can customize the writing screen by changing the font, colors and background image to create a personalized ambiance. What you get is a very successful distraction-free writing environment. This hides the entire application to the docking bar.

It takes a few mouse clicks on the hide-away menu bar to access a special minimize option. This makes it a bit more convenient to switch screens and access icons for specialized tasks that your desktop flavor uses. Unchecking the full-screen mode in the Tools/Preferences menu shows the panel or your dekstop’s specific notification item. This may require some personal workflow adjustments if you multitask or use numerous virtual workspaces on the Linux desktop. Its user interface lacks the traditional windows-control icons to minimize, maximize or close the window. Focuswriter is a full-screen writing program.
