

Writing Technology
Using Editing Programs
First, let me just say, writers and editors would be foolish not to make use of any technology that could be beneficial to the writing progress. Programs such as Grammarly serve a valuable function, and I always run clients' work through software before and after an edit, in case it spots something I missed. However, it's important to remember that when something is 'flagged,' it is not telling you something is 'wrong' per se. It is pointing out places where you might find something you want changed. It does not know if you meant to say its or it's, there or their or even meet, mete and meat.
A client once wrote to complain that after my editing, his book was rife with errors. He found errors. His friends found errors. His mother's maid's stepmother thinks she found some errors. I naturally pulled up his files, expecting to …
Can of Worms and Wormholes here, Steven.
Gammarly and other AI programs do not know what to think of my style of writing, which makes them useless. I turn all that off in emails or Word, for example, especially when I am writing live to stop the interference.
You were a brave soul to clean up my manuscript and I am eternally grateful!
I do use a spell check and WordCounter to help find repeated words which is helpful to me but otherwise, it must be a human editor.