01
Paste the text
Drop in a caption, script, article section, or note so the tool can calculate live word, sentence, and paragraph counts.
Text utility tool
Measure draft length fast with live word, sentence, paragraph, and reading-time stats, then scan repeated terms before publishing.
Use the live counts to size a draft quickly, then scan the top terms to spot repetition.
Words
14
Characters
92
No spaces
79
Sentences
1
Paragraphs
1
Read time
1m
Paste the draft, scan the core counts, then use the top terms list to catch repetition before you publish.
01
Drop in a caption, script, article section, or note so the tool can calculate live word, sentence, and paragraph counts.
02
Use the cards to read word count, characters, characters without spaces, sentences, paragraphs, and reading time at a glance.
03
Use the top words block to spot overused terms before you publish or send the text somewhere else.
This tool is strongest when you need a quick count check before publishing, submitting, or trimming text.
Check whether a short caption or thread draft is too thin, too repetitive, or longer than it needs to be.
Read the paragraph and reading-time counts when you want a faster overview of a longer draft.
Compare counts after cleanup so you can see whether the revision actually made the text tighter.
A useful word counter should help you judge both size and repetition quickly.
Input
Short launch note for a new tool with a clear follow line and one repeated phrase.
What you read
Words: 15 Sentences: 1 Reading time: <1m
Useful when you want to know whether a short caption still says enough.
Input
A longer draft with two paragraphs and repeated terms around growth, content, and posting.
What you read
Paragraphs: 2 Top words: content (4), posting (3), growth (3)
Useful when a rewrite should remove repetition rather than only shorten the text.
The page measures words, characters, characters without spaces, sentences, paragraphs, reading time, and repeated terms.
Yes. It works for quick caption checks, but it is also useful for longer descriptions, notes, and scripts.
They help you spot repetition fast, especially when the draft sounds flatter than expected but you cannot see why right away.