Text tools that
just work.
Fast, private, no signup. Everything runs in your browser.
Word Counter
Count words, characters, sentences, paragraphs, and estimate reading time.
Case Converter
Transform text between UPPER, lower, Title, Sentence, camelCase, and more.
Lorem Ipsum
Generate placeholder text in paragraphs, sentences, or words.
Character Counter
Detailed character breakdown with social media limits.
Text Repeater
Repeat any text N times with custom separators.
Remove Duplicates
Deduplicate lines instantly with sorting and trimming options.
Why Use Online Text Tools?
Whether you're a writer tracking word counts for an essay, a developer converting variable names between camelCase and snake_case, or a social media manager checking character limits before posting — text manipulation is a daily task that shouldn't require installing software or signing up for accounts.
WordBit gives you instant access to the most common text tools, all running directly in your browser. Your text is never uploaded to any server, so there's no privacy risk — even with sensitive documents, confidential drafts, or personal writing.
Every tool is designed for speed and simplicity: paste your text, get your result, copy it out. No loading screens, no ads blocking your content, no premium upsells. Just tools that work.
Who Uses WordBit?
Writers & Students
Track word counts for essays, check reading time for blog posts, and clean up text formatting before submission.
Developers
Convert between naming conventions, generate placeholder text for UI mockups, and deduplicate data quickly.
Social Media Managers
Check character limits for Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, and YouTube before posting to avoid truncated content.
SEO Professionals
Count characters for meta titles and descriptions, deduplicate keyword lists, and format content for publishing.
Tips for Better Writing
Good writing is not about using complex vocabulary or building elaborate sentences. It is about clarity. The best writers communicate ideas with precision, removing every word that does not serve the reader. Whether you are drafting a blog post, an email, or a research paper, these principles apply universally.
Write short sentences. Aim for an average of 15 to 20 words per sentence. Varying sentence length creates rhythm and keeps readers engaged, but consistently long sentences cause fatigue. If a sentence runs past 30 words, look for a natural place to split it.
Use active voice. "The team shipped the feature" is direct and clear. "The feature was shipped by the team" adds words without adding meaning. Active voice tells the reader who did what, which is almost always the most important information.
Cut filler words ruthlessly. Words like "very," "really," "just," "actually," and "basically" rarely add value. Remove them and see if the sentence still works — it almost always does, and the tighter version reads better.
Front-load your key point. Journalists call this the "inverted pyramid" — put the most important information first. On the web, most readers scan rather than read linearly. If your main point is buried in the third paragraph, many people will never reach it.
Read your writing aloud. This is the single most effective editing technique. When you hear your words, awkward phrasing, run-on sentences, and unnatural rhythm become obvious. If you stumble reading a sentence, your audience will stumble too.
Know your audience's reading level. Technical documentation for engineers can use domain jargon freely. A consumer-facing landing page should aim for a sixth-grade reading level. Match complexity to audience expectations, and use a word counter to track sentence length as a proxy for complexity.
How Text Tools Fit Into Your Workflow
Text tools are not just for one-off tasks — they can become a regular part of your writing and development process. Before publishing a blog post, run it through a word counter to verify it meets minimum length requirements for SEO. Before posting on social media, check it against platform limits with a character counter.
Developers can use the case converter when migrating between programming languages that use different naming conventions. A Python backend with snake_case variables feeding a JavaScript frontend with camelCase properties is a common source of manual renaming work that a converter handles instantly.
Designers working on mockups can generate exactly the right amount of placeholder text instead of copy-pasting from random websites. QA testers can use the text repeater to stress-test input fields with large volumes of text. Data analysts can deduplicate lists exported from spreadsheets before importing them into other systems.
Use the Workflow Guides
Step-by-step workflows for cleaning text, checking social posts, writing SEO snippets, formatting developer strings, and protecting private drafts.
Read Our Blog
Practical articles on social media character limits, SEO writing, naming conventions, readability scores, and more.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is WordBit really free?
Yes, completely free. No premium plans, no feature gates, no sign-up required. All tools are available to everyone.
Is my text private?
100%. All processing happens in your browser using JavaScript. Your text is never sent to any server — not even temporarily. We physically cannot see your data.
Do I need to create an account?
No. Just open any tool and start using it. No accounts, no emails, no sign-up forms.
What tools does WordBit offer?
WordBit includes a word counter, character counter, case converter, Lorem Ipsum generator, text repeater, and duplicate line remover. Each tool runs entirely in your browser with no data uploaded to any server.
Can I use WordBit on my phone?
Yes. All tools are fully responsive and work on smartphones and tablets. The interface adapts to smaller screens so you can count words, convert case, or generate placeholder text on the go.
How accurate is the word counter?
The word counter splits text on whitespace boundaries, which matches the method used by Microsoft Word and Google Docs. Hyphenated words count as one word. The character count includes spaces by default and also shows a count without spaces.
Does WordBit work offline?
Once a page is loaded, most tools continue to work without an internet connection since all processing happens in your browser. However, you need an initial connection to load the page.
What social media character limits does the character counter track?
The character counter shows limits for Twitter/X (280 characters), Instagram captions (2,200), LinkedIn posts (3,000), YouTube titles (100), and more. Limits are updated regularly to reflect platform changes.
Can I use the case converter for programming naming conventions?
Absolutely. The case converter supports camelCase, snake_case, kebab-case, PascalCase, and more. It is especially useful when converting variable names between JavaScript (camelCase) and Python (snake_case) codebases.
How is WordBit different from other text tools?
WordBit prioritizes privacy, speed, and simplicity. Every tool runs client-side in your browser — your text never touches a server. There are no ads blocking content, no sign-up walls, and no premium upsells. It is designed to be the fastest path from having text to having the result you need.