Docs · Edit panel

Edit panel

Line, copy, developmental, chapter summaries.

Edit overview

Edit is three AI editors and a chapter-summary tool. Each editor stays in its lane: developmental looks at structure, line looks at sentence-level craft, copy looks at mechanics.

All three are suggestion-based, nothing rewrites your prose silently. You accept, modify, or reject each note. Available on Loom and Tapestry.

Line editor

The line editor reads a chapter (or a passage you select) and surfaces sentence-level notes: rhythm, redundancy, dead weight, voice consistency, dialogue efficiency.

Voice consistency is its most distinctive feature. It reads the character voice profiles you set up in Plan and flags lines where a character "sounds wrong", Mira's chatty register in a scene where you'd written her tense and clipped, for example. You can dismiss any note, and dismissed notes don't come back on the next run.

Copy editor

The copy editor handles mechanics, grammar, punctuation, capitalisation, tense slips, character name spellings, in-world terminology consistency.

It builds a per-project style sheet automatically as it goes. So when it sees "grey" in one chapter and "gray" in another, it decides once (you confirm) and respects that everywhere afterward. The style sheet lives in Plan → World building → Glossary and can be edited directly.

Developmental editor

The developmental editor takes the broadest view: pacing, arc, motivation, premise drift, the mid-book sag. It reads the chapter-summary timeline (rather than the full manuscript) plus your beats and character files, so its notes know where you wanted the book to go and where you actually went.

Output is structured: a top-line take, three to five high-impact notes, and a list of chapter-specific concerns with links to the chapters. Treat it as a paid editor who's read every draft of your book, disagreement is expected.

Chapter summaries

A summary is a tight paragraph that describes a single chapter as it stands now. Generate one chapter at a time, or run "Summarise all" to refresh the whole manuscript.

Summaries refresh on demand when you rewrite a chapter, so they don't go stale. They power the developmental editor and the synopsis builder in Pitch, and they're searchable directly from the chapter list ("which chapter has the funeral scene?").

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