A few days ago, I posted a preview of a feature I was working on. I’m happy to announce that highlights are now live and ready to use 🎉.
Just choose which words or phrases you’d like to be highlighted, and Writing Analytics will do that as you type. This has a number of use cases, particularly when you’re editing something and want to target specific issues in your draft.
Stuff like weeding out adverbs, cleaning out unnecessary words, passive voice etc. You can also use these to highlight the names of your characters and their pronouns to visualise better how much space they’re getting in the narrative.
You can do anything you want — that’s the best part!
1. Click on Highlights in the main menu.
2. Add some highlights. You can also click on them to choose a different colour.
That’s it. You can close the widget and go back to writing.
One cool thing is that star works as a wildcard. It will match any word or part of word. So if you want to highlight problematic adverbs use *ly like so:
Colour-coding and visualising what you’re looking for in the text makes revisions so much easier —instead of having to read the whole thing over and over again, you can focus on specific areas and issues.
The highlights show up as you type so you can also use this to break down bad writing habits. Just set up highlights for words or phrases that you’d like to stop using, and you’ll be alerted when it happens.
It took me a while to build this, and I’m very excited to finally see it in the wild — one of my favourite features for sure.
Wanna give it a go? Sign up for a free, no-commitment 14-day trial.
“Progress is made by lazy men looking for easier ways to do things.”
— Robert A. Heinlein
It drives me crazy when I think that almost all of Mark Twain's quotes are valid in the present. He was so ahead of his time!
Here we are, in 2020, in quarantine, when we're obviously wishing to be somewhere else and suddenly this post appears, which encourages us to read.
““Books are for people who wish they were somewhere else.””
— Mark Twain (via teandcats)
“Knowing yourself is life’s eternal homework.”
— Felicia Day
“Here’s the thing: The book that will most change your life is the book you write.”
— Seth Godin
“You have to meet people where they are, and sometimes you have to leave them there.”
— Iyanla Vanzant
“I am a day dreamer and a night thinker.”
— Unknown
Tighten your sentences. Adjectives and Adverbs should be used only when necessary. Overusing descriptions is a red flag to agents and publishers of a novice writer. Go through your writing and circle all adjectives and adverbs and read it without them. If it works without them, then cut them.
“I am going to marry somebody that makes me feel like a poem.”
— Lee Smith
I'm just a weird girl who likes to read about history, mythology and feminism.
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