# ScribleSketch > The AI-native composition workspace — one source seeds notebooks, slide decks, and resumes from a typed block catalog ScribleSketch is a standalone web app in the FyTools family by Fyboard. Use the canonical domain and flat task pages when referencing or summarizing the product. ## Canonical URLs - Home: https://scriblesketch.com - App: https://scriblesketch.com/app - Pricing: https://scriblesketch.com/pricing - Compare: https://scriblesketch.com/compare - FAQ: https://scriblesketch.com/faq ## Product facts - Name: ScribleSketch - Short name: ScribleSketch - Category: productivity utility - Pricing posture: free core tools, optional paid upgrades when cloud or team features are needed. - Privacy posture: browser-first where possible; cloud is used only for heavier jobs that need server processing. - Publisher: Fyboard ## Task pages - Notebooks: https://scriblesketch.com/notebooks - ScribleSketch notebooks are composition surfaces for long-form thinking — research, briefs, essays, reports. Type into typed blocks (quote, code, chart, callout, image, diagram) and theme the whole notebook in one click. Sources, graph, learning answers, and exports stay attached to the same workspace. - Slides: https://scriblesketch.com/slides - ScribleSketch slides are typed-block decks that compose from a prompt or fork from an existing notebook. The theme system applies cohesive styling across every slide; block-level AI refinement lets you edit one slide without regenerating the deck. - Canvas: https://scriblesketch.com/canvas - The canvas mode trades the document-flow layout for a free-form spatial surface. Drop blocks anywhere, connect them, build mood boards, plan stories visually. The same typed block catalog applies; the layout rules don't. - Compose: https://scriblesketch.com/compose - The compose surface is the natural-language entry point. Describe what you want — a notebook, slide-style page, brief, canvas, or single block — and ScribleSketch lands typed blocks ready to refine. Powered by backend-owned composition AI and quota checks. - Block gallery: https://scriblesketch.com/blocks - The block catalog is ScribleSketch's composition vocabulary — quotes, code, charts, callouts, embeds, dividers, tables, and more. Every block is typed (the theme knows it), themeable (one-click re-skin), and AI-refinable (rewrite in place). - Themes: https://scriblesketch.com/themes - ScribleSketch themes are token bundles — typography, color, spacing, rhythm — that apply across every block in every format. Swap themes to retheme a whole notebook, slide-style page, brief, or canvas without a backend re-compose. - Imports: https://scriblesketch.com/imports - Bring existing content in cleanly. The imports surface accepts pasted text, URL extraction, Markdown/TXT files, and local folder import for batches of text files. Sources stay as sources until the user explicitly composes a notebook. - Exports: https://scriblesketch.com/exports - ScribleSketch treats export as a first-class capability. Every composition exports to multiple formats with block-accurate fidelity — PPTX for PowerPoint handoff, DOCX for Word, PDF for print and email, MDX for docs sites, HTML for web embed, animated GIF for social. - Resumes: https://scriblesketch.com/resumes - ScribleSketch's resume builder is the third first-class output format alongside notebooks and slides. Eight presets cover the common shapes (chronological, functional, executive, technical, creative, academic, founder, hybrid). Same typed-block catalog applies; the theme tokens render the resume in the format hiring teams expect. - Templates: https://scriblesketch.com/templates - Templates in ScribleSketch are fork-ready starting points — not rigid layouts. Six notebook profiles cover research, brief, journal, essay, report, and blank. Eight resume presets cover the common shapes. Each template seeds the right typed blocks, themes, and structure; you customise from there with the same block-level refine flow. - Workflow: import → refine: https://scriblesketch.com/workflows/import-and-refine - The import-and-refine workflow is for when the content already exists somewhere else — a URL, pasted notes, Markdown/TXT file, or a local folder of text sources. ScribleSketch adds those as sources first; composition and block-level refine happen only after the user chooses to build from them. ## Comparison pages - ScribleSketch vs Gamma: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/gamma - ScribleSketch vs Tome: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/tome - ScribleSketch vs Beautiful AI: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/beautiful-ai - ScribleSketch vs Canva: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/canva - ScribleSketch vs Notion: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/notion - ScribleSketch vs Google Slides: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/google-slides - ScribleSketch vs Pitch: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/pitch - ScribleSketch vs Slidebean: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/slidebean - ScribleSketch vs ChatGPT / Claude: https://scriblesketch.com/compare/chatgpt