Language Tool - Free is Good, Paid is Better
Universal Apps
Mac apps have had rudimentary built-in grammar checkers for a while. Grammarly was the first well-know commercial product to elevate the capabilities of that tool genre, becoming extremely popular with students in particular. Lately, LanguageTool has surged in popularity. It is integrated into many well-known writing apps across multiple platforms, including macOS and iOS. Professionally, I am tasked with composing Confluence (knowledge base) documents for Jira, the ticketing system my job uses. Personally, I maintain three blogs as a non-monetized blogs as a hobby. I write a lot as a result. I have been using the free version of LanguageTool for a couple of months. It does a better job than the native spell checkers I previously used, and it helps with things like missing commas and omitted words. I took advantage of a Black Friday sale to sign up for a year on the Pro Plan. As a result, the app now has a much larger range of tools for me to use. LanguageTool has a plugin for Safari, Firefox and Chromium browsers. It has a tool specifically built for Microsoft Office, Google Docs, Apple's Pages and LibreOffice. For email users, it works with Apple Mail, Outlook, Thunderbird and Gmail. It even has a plugin for Obsidian, where I do most of my writing. On a Mac, it is also optimized for uses in other apps like Messages and Notes. There is a native editor app for Mac users. Language Tools's capabilities are sizable.
-
Grammar
- Word order
- Verb tenses
- Subject/verb agreement
- Commas and in-depth punctuation
-
Style
- Repetition
- Over-used words and phrases
- Wordiness
- Foreign terms
-
Semantics
- Lack of clarity
- Word confusion
- Double negatives
-
Format and Typography
- Consistency for numbers and letters
- Spacing
- Time and date formats
-
Spelling
- Misspelled names and acronyms
- Casing errors
- Easy to import your Mac's personal dictionary