![]() ![]() To save your note to Scrivener as a web archive that will display a link to your PDF (which you can click to display the PDF in Preview): In Scrivener, add this link to your Project Bookmarks, to a document’s Bookmarks, or add it as a link within a text.Īfter you’re done copying the link, you may delete the Table of Contents note if you like. ![]() (This is a link using Evernote’s URL scheme which enables the link to open Evernote and display the note.) Still in Evernote, open the new Table of Contents note, and copy your target note’s link. Still in Evernote, click the “Create Table of Contents Note” button at the bottom of the multi-note display. In Evernote, use cmd-click to select your target note plus one other note (any note). To get a link that will open any Evernote note in the Evernote app, So far as I know, there is only one way for you to get a PDF that’s in Evernote into Scrivener so that it will open directly in Scrivener, and that is to download a copy of the PDF and import that copy into Scrivener, either directly or as a research file alias. Other ways I know to connect information in Evernote to Scrivener, in rough order from closest to your request to farthest from your request (with notes on dealing with PDFs): Doing anything else is more or less a pain. Such links always open in web Evernote, which is Evernote’s default behavior. What you’ve done is copy a sharing link into Scrivener. This doesn’t have to do with Scrivener so much as it does Evernote, which makes getting stuff out of Evernote almost as hard as getting stuff into Evernote is easy. ![]()
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