ToolMill.io

Word, Character, and Line Counter

Count words, characters, and lines for essays, blog posts, ad copy, product descriptions, SMS drafts, API payloads, and social posts. This is useful when you need to stay under publishing limits or compare text lengths quickly. ToolMill works instantly in your browser, so you can analyze drafts without sending them to a third-party server.

Text

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Examples

Basic short text count
Input
Hello world from ToolMill.
Output
Words: 4
Characters: 26
Lines: 1
Longer text statistics example
Input
ToolMill helps you clean text, convert data, and inspect formats directly in your browser.
Output
Words: 14
Characters: 90
Lines: 1

How This Text Counter Works

This page counts words, characters, and lines from pasted text directly in your browser. It is useful when you want a quick measurement of draft length without copying the text into a document editor or remote service. The goal is fast practical counting, not deep linguistic analysis.

What Counts as a Word, Character, and Line

Words are counted as sequences of non-whitespace characters. Characters are based on the raw text length. Lines are based on line breaks in the pasted input. That makes the output easy to understand for routine checks, even though it is not the same as a language-aware editor or tokenization library.

Current Output Metrics on This Page

The current output on this page reports words, characters, and lines. That narrower scope is intentional for this version of the tool. If you specifically need bytes or characters-without-spaces, review the output labels here carefully rather than assuming every possible text metric is included.

Example: Short Plain Text Count

A short sentence or heading is the fastest way to sanity-check the page. You can immediately see how many words and characters it contains and whether the total length fits a rough limit before you paste the copy somewhere else.

Example: Multi-Line Draft Count

For notes, captions, or draft blocks with line breaks, the line total can matter just as much as the word count. This page is useful when you want a quick view of how large a multi-line text block has become before moving it into another system.

When to Use a Basic Text Counter

It is practical for rough checks on articles, product text, short messages, social copy, internal notes, and content snippets with publishing limits. It is especially useful when you only need quick visibility into length, not a full writing-analysis environment.

Limits of Simple Word and Character Counts

This is not a grammar tool, tokenizer, byte analyzer, or style checker. Complex scripts, edge-case punctuation, and platform-specific measurement rules can differ from what you see here. That is why the output should be treated as a practical estimate for common workflows, not as a universal editorial standard.

Metric Definitions Users Often Confuse

Before You Rely on a Count for a Requirement

If you are writing to a hard limit for a form, app, exam, or publishing workflow, confirm the destination’s own counting rules before you rely on the number from this page. Simple local counts are a useful approximation, but the final authority is the system that enforces the limit.

Why Counts Can Differ Between Tools

Different editors and platforms count words and characters differently, especially around hyphenated words, punctuation, emoji, repeated spaces, and line endings. A result that looks slightly different elsewhere does not necessarily mean either tool is broken; it often reflects different counting rules.

How to Interpret the Counts on This Page

The totals on this page are simple counts of the text as entered here. They are useful for rough drafting, review, and quick checks, but each number still depends on how whitespace, punctuation, and line breaks appear in the input. Treat them as practical editor-style counts rather than universal publishing counts.

Writers and developers often mix up words, characters, characters without spaces, bytes, lines, and tokens. They are not interchangeable. This page focuses only on the three metrics it displays, so it is best used when those exact measurements are the ones you actually need.

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