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    TOOL · TEXT

    Scratch pad

    A text box that saves itself in this browser while you type — for jotting a phone number, drafting an email or parking a text without opening an editor.

    0 words · 0 characters

    This scratch pad is saved only in this browser, on this device — no account, no cloud. Cleared the browser data or used a private tab? It is gone. For anything important, download the .txt.

    Processed in your browser — your files never leave your computer.

    How it works

    1. Write or paste

      The text saves itself 300 ms after you stop typing — the "saved at HH:MM:SS" indicator confirms every write.

    2. Come back whenever

      Closed the tab, shut down the computer — open this page again in the same browser and the draft is here. The word and character counter follows the text.

    3. Download or erase

      "Download .txt" saves a real copy on your computer. "Erase everything" asks for confirmation — it only erases on the second click, on "really erase?".

    Frequently asked questions

    Where is the draft saved?

    In localStorage — YOUR browser’s local storage, on this device. There is no server, account or cloud involved: the text never leaves your machine, and not even we can read it.

    If I clear my browser data, do I lose the text?

    Yes — clearing browsing data ("cookies and site data") takes the draft with it. Private tabs too: the text vanishes when the window closes. Before any cleanup, download the .txt.

    Does the draft show up on my phone too?

    No — no cloud, no sync: each browser has its own separate draft. To take the text to another device, download the .txt and send it to yourself, or use a notes service with an account.

    How much text fits?

    localStorage gives about 5 MB per site — in practice, millions of characters, or a whole novel. If the browser refuses the write (storage full or blocked), the tool warns immediately and the text stays on screen for you to download.

    I clicked "erase everything" by accident — now what?

    Relax: the first click only opens the confirmation. The text only goes away if you click "really erase?" — and there is a "cancel" right beside it. Once confirmed, there is no way back: erased is erased.

    Can anyone read what I write here?

    No. The text goes from the textarea to the browser’s local storage without touching the network — no server, no analytics on the content, no logs. Just remember: anyone using the same browser on this computer opens the same page and sees the same draft.

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