Just chiming in to say that I also rely on the ODT Scan to make Scrivener and Zotero be friends. My only option now is downgrading to Zotero 6 which is obviously not ideal. Otherwise I'm at a loss - and in the middle of a big writing project (with lots of scannable cites already included). I've been a huge fan of Zotero since the beginning, and I added Scrivener to my workflow relatively recently, only after carefully making sure it could be done (albeit awkwardly through ODT Scan, but there was a way). Thank you!
It has instructions on how to use BetterBibTex and DocDown.
Make sure to set your Scrivener compile for MultiMarkdown, and, in the compile preferences, check the box to Convert rich text to markdown.
The workflow becomes: write with quickcite in Scrivener, compile to markdown, use DocDown to convert to docx, open in Word with live Zotero citations for formatting etc.
Any updates on this? I'm another years-long Scrivener user who has depended on ODF/RTF scan for my academic writing... I've been using Zotero 6 to keep my workflow functional but am considering switching workflows to the one mentioned above to upgrade to Zotero 7.
You can use this page!
https://github.com/lowercasename/docdown
It has instructions on how to use BetterBibTex and DocDown.
Make sure to set your Scrivener compile for MultiMarkdown, and, in the compile preferences, check the box to Convert rich text to markdown.
The workflow becomes: write with quickcite in Scrivener, compile to markdown, use DocDown to convert to docx, open in Word with live Zotero citations for formatting etc.
That sounds very promising. Thank you for the suggestion!