I recently picked up writing short stories again. I briefly looked at different editors, but ended up just doing it in vscode (daily driver). I'll make sure to look at cheese paper for the next one, looks like it has some cool features!
A feature that I have been dreaming about is making an editor that treats each paragraph like a unit of work, and the full text is created by linking together different paragraphs. That way you can easily try different ways without deleting any text. Sort of like nodes in a graph.
Maybe it would explain itself better if that said "specifically designed for writing fiction"? (lots of other sorts of writing don't have characters, for example...)
The first sentence of the first non-bolded paragraph of the website is:
>Cheese Paper is a text editor specifically designed for writing, particularly fiction.
I don't think the HN submitter is the author of the software, but if you're referring to the HN submission title maybe they'll take you up on your suggestion.
A feature that I have been dreaming about is making an editor that treats each paragraph like a unit of work, and the full text is created by linking together different paragraphs. That way you can easily try different ways without deleting any text. Sort of like nodes in a graph.
And here's my a corporate themed short story: https://dahl.dev/capacity
>Cheese Paper is a text editor specifically designed for writing, particularly fiction.
I don't think the HN submitter is the author of the software, but if you're referring to the HN submission title maybe they'll take you up on your suggestion.