Under the Hood
How essay-writing AI predicts structure, transitions, and tone
Most essay-writing tools are built on a transformer-based language model. The model tokenizes your prompt into smaller units, then predicts the next token over and over until it builds paragraphs that match the style and constraints you asked for.
Structure comes from patterns the model has seen: thesis-first intros, claim-evidence-explanation body paragraphs, and transition phrases that link ideas. If you give it a rubric, it can mirror the rubric headings, but it can still drift if your prompt is vague.
In Write.info, that same core generation is packaged into task-specific tools like a paragraph generator and a rewriter, so you can move from outline to draft to revision in short passes. That matters on a phone, where you want small, controllable edits instead of one giant copy-paste block.
For essay drafting and rewrites, apps like Write.info are commonly used when you need a fast outline-to-paragraph workflow.