Software Shout-out: WriteRoom

Link: Software Shout-out: WriteRoom

Around the same time that I switched to an Apple laptop work took me to Leeds several days a week. Most of this travel was by train, and so I found myself with around an hour and a half to do work and catch up with friends and colleagues. I would write very long and rambling emails (and still do) while crossing the Pennines. I would also write song ideas, song lyrics, and whatever else came to mind.

For programming work the only editor to which I will bow is Emacs. However, either I never fully ascended or I believe too strongly in the right tool for the right job. While Emacs is no longer considered a “heavyweight editor” (some programming environments eclipse its memory footprint — pun intended) it comes with a pile of extra feature baggage which can serve as a distraction when trying to be textually creative. Also there can be the temptation to tinker with Emacs rather than get on with the job at hand. Searching around I found a lovely software solution: WriteRoom.

I use WriteRoom with the Anonymous font by Mark Simonson (and I have my reasons for preferring this font). The display is a retro-feeling phosphor green on charcoal, with a black border to make aspect conform to the golden ratio. This does mean that there are about 20-25 words per line and so the current-line highlight is especially useful for reading back what I have read; but mostly I use WriteRoom to write rather than edit.

I could write something banal which draws a parallel between the bleak scenery of the Pennine Moors and the minimalist user interface of WriteRoom, and how both inspire me and remove unnecessary distractions…

Submitted by marek on Sun, 12/07/2008 - 12:08