I keep trying to install Sugarcube 2.x as a format, but, for whatever reason, am told that the file is not able to be attached. How do I properly install Sugarcube 2.x into Twine 2? I would really appreciate the help!
Have you read this guide?
If yes, can you let us know at which point of the steps below you are seeing the issue?
+ Download the current local/offline version of SugarCube 2.x for Twine 2.
+ Extract the archive to a safe location on your computer and take note of the path to it. Make sure to keep the files together if you move them out of the included directory.
+ Launch Twine 2.
+ Click on the Formats link in the Twine 2 sidebar.
+ In the dialog that opens, click on the Add a New Format tab.
+ Finally, paste a file URL to the format.js file, based on the path from step #2, into the textbox and click the +Add button (see below for examples).
You can only add third-party story formats to either:
1. a local copy of the web-browser based release of the application, which can be download from the download page and are the archive files without an operation system postfix in the file name. eg. twine_2.0.11.zip
2. the install-able release of the application, which can be downloaded from either the main web-page or from the same downloads web-page in which case they are the archive files with an operation system postfix in the file name. eg. twine_2.0.11_win64.exe or twine_2.0.11_osx.zip
Comments
If yes, can you let us know at which point of the steps below you are seeing the issue?
1. a local copy of the web-browser based release of the application, which can be download from the download page and are the archive files without an operation system postfix in the file name. eg. twine_2.0.11.zip
2. the install-able release of the application, which can be downloaded from either the main web-page or from the same downloads web-page in which case they are the archive files with an operation system postfix in the file name. eg. twine_2.0.11_win64.exe or twine_2.0.11_osx.zip
You also can't have two formats with the same name in most situations, but in that case the error message should be more explicit than you're getting.