Add Output Control to Any Prompt
Format, length, and exclusions are the three levers that make AI output land in usable shape. A rewrite shows how to retrofit them onto a prompt that has none.
View Resource →Prompt Builders
Paste a weak prompt and get a stronger rewrite — vague wording replaced with concrete instructions, hedges turned into commitments, and missing elements added as placeholders you complete. The goal never changes. Runs entirely in your browser.
Paste the prompt you want to improve — the rewriter keeps its goal and strengthens the wording.
Format, length, and exclusions are the three levers that make AI output land in usable shape. A rewrite shows how to retrofit them onto a prompt that has none.
View Resource →If you can't say what makes the output right, the model can't either. Success criteria turn 'make it good' into a checkable definition of done.
View Resource →'Make it good', 'be detailed', 'keep it interesting' — vague prompts get vague output. The fix is mechanical: replace every fuzzy word with a checkable instruction.
View Resource →Generic prompts produce generic output. Specificity is added in slots — audience, context, named requirements — and a rewrite shows exactly which slots yours is missing.
View Resource →The full enhancement pass in one worked example: fix vague wording, commit the hedges, strip filler, fill the gaps — without changing what the prompt asks for.
View Resource →The fastest fix for mediocre AI output is rewriting the prompt: vague words become concrete instructions, hedges become commitments, and missing elements get filled.
View Resource →'Write a blog post about X, make it engaging' is the most rewritten prompt on the internet. Here's its strong form — angle, reader, hook rule, and length.
View Resource →Marketing prompts built from 'compelling' and 'persuasive' produce copy that sounds like everyone's. The rewrite swaps adjectives for an offer, a reader, and one CTA.
View Resource →'Research X and tell me what you find' returns a topic summary, not an answer. The rewrite adds the control a research ask needs: scope, criteria, and output shape.
View Resource →'Be nice and fix their issue' is a liability in a support prompt. The rewrite adds the control lines support actually needs: boundaries, length, and a next step.
View Resource →Fix an unreliable prompt the methodical way instead of poking at it — find what's actually unclear, rewrite for specificity, cut the noise, then prove the new version beats the old one.
View Playbook →Paste the prompt you want to improve, pick a Rewrite Goal (clarity, specificity, output control, professional, concise, detailed, or best practice), and click Rewrite Prompt. The rewriter analyzes the prompt with deterministic browser-side rules — nothing leaves your page — then produces a stronger version: vague words like "good" and "engaging" become concrete instructions, hedges like "some" and "if possible" become commitments, filler and duplicates disappear, and missing elements (audience, format, length, success criteria) are added as [bracketed] placeholders you complete. The original goal never changes, and the report lists every improvement applied plus the risks that remain.
The Formatter reorganizes your existing words into a clean structure — it never changes them. The Cleaner removes repetition and noise — it never adds anything. The Rewriter is the only tool that changes and adds wording: it replaces vague terms with concrete instructions and fills missing elements with placeholders. Reorganize → Formatter, remove → Cleaner, improve → Rewriter.
No. The rewrite is produced by deterministic rules running in your browser: a vague-term replacement map, hedge fixes, filler stripping, duplicate collapsing, and gap-filling templates. The same input always produces the same rewrite, and your prompt never leaves the page.
Decisions only you can make. The rewriter knows your prompt is missing an audience, but it doesn't know who your audience is — so it adds 'Audience: [who will read this]' instead of inventing one. That's what keeps the rewrite honest: it strengthens your prompt without changing your intent.
No. The goal of the prompt is preserved — the rewrite clarifies, structures, and completes it. With Preserve Intent on (the default), every substantive instruction from the original survives into the rewrite. Turning it off lets the rewriter drop hedged optional lines ('maybe add…') and merge overlapping ones.
Improve Clarity fixes vague and hedged wording. Increase Specificity also adds audience and context slots. Add Output Control adds format, length, and exclusion rules. Professional Rewrite sets a professional tone and strips filler. Concise Rewrite shortens without losing meaning. Detailed Rewrite fills every missing element. Best Practice Rewrite applies the balanced default set.
The Improvements Applied list itemizes every transformation, and the original and rewrite sit side by side. For a full instruction-level diff of two versions, paste them into the Prompt Version Diff.