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- Total Pages: 1 Words: 457 Bibliography: 0 Citation Style: APA Document Type: Essay Essay Instructions: Minimalism became popular in th mid 1960s. Consider the musical culture of the time, both classical and popular.
- So far we have mostly looked at paragraphs in isolation. In an essay, however, we need to link our ideas together. This page provides a few tips to help you craft strong paragraph transitions. The Weakest Link. Let’s first review what not to do. Don’t introduce your next point too early.
- Step 1: Plan your blog post by choosing a topic, creating an outline, conducting research, and checking facts. Step 2: Craft a headline that is both informative and will capture readers’ attentions. Step 3: Write your post, either writing a draft in a single session or gradually word on parts of it.
Regardless of a reader's belief whether 'Less is more' or 'Less is Less', the concept of minimalism is what it is - Less. That spark of minimalist literature is vibrant to this day almost everywhere we see. Ironic how something so vehemently (and unjustly) looked down upon in its early days, sews itself into the very fabric of culture.
Key features
Full-screen.
Focus on your work. Even if Mark Pilgrim doesn't like full-screen editors, some of us do.
Live text statistics.
Word, page and character counts are updated live as you type.
Programmable page count formula.
Specify what formula to use for page count calculation. You’re not constrained to the 250 words per page rule anymore.
Customizable look and paragraph format.
Change the colors, line spacing, first line indent, paragraph spacing, font...
Perfectly portable.
A single self-contained executable file. That’s all. Easy to use with a pendrive, so you can carry your writing environment with you everywhere. Q10 will remember the last file you worked on, even if the drive letter assigned to your pendrive changes from computer to computer.
Easy to use timer alarm.
Perfect for timed writing sessions and word wars. When the time is over, it will tell you how many words you wrote in that period.
Spell checker.
You don't make mistakes. I know it. You know it. But many people do, and Q10 lets them check their spelling.
Notes.
Any paragraph starting with '..' is considered a note. You can get a list of all notes in the current document and jump instantly to any of them.
Target count.
Displays completed percentage. You can choose units: words, pages, lines, paragraphs or characters. If NaNoWriMo is your thing, this is for you.
Partial counts.
Keep track of the extension of current chapter or see how much content you've produced in the current writing session. You're free to use partial counts as you like: up to four counters with customizable labels and units: words, pages, lines, paragraphs or characters.
Autocorrections and quick text.
Unlimited autocorrection entries to fix on the fly those persistent typing errors. Unlimited quick texts list for frequently used words or phrases, like character names, places, etc.
Standard and clean text format.
You will be able to open your work with any text editor or word processor. Now and in the future.
Encoding and line endings agnostic.
Reads and writes ANSI and UTF-8 texts, and line endings formats are not a problem for Q10.
Typing sound effects.
Get that typewriter feeling again. For the trivia lovers among you, the typing sounds were taken from the movie 'Amélie'.
Small, fast and stable.
Less than 360Kb in size, you don’t need huge frameworks or runtimes to use this beauty.
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Autosaving.
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You can ask Q10 to save your work after some number of new paragraphs, or after some time has elapsed. If you're really paranoid, set Q10 to save every paragraph.
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Free.
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Q10 is, and will be, freeware. Period.