Drafts

Drafts are the main work area in Page Writer.

The `Draft` mode shows the markdown file. You can edit the file directly, preview the markdown, and save changes back to the workspace file. The right side also shows a search-result style preview based on the file title, description, and URL.

Draft structure

A useful draft has a clear title, a short description, a URL, and a body that answers the page goal.

The file can start simple. A sitemap-created page usually begins with frontmatter, a title, an intro area, a "Why this matters" section, and a "Next steps" section. Page Writer helps turn that starter file into real copy.

1

Keep the frontmatter

Check title, description, and URL before body work.

2

Shape the sections

Build headings that match the page goal.

3

Tie claims to notes

Keep important statements close to proof.

4

Save the file

Save the markdown before checks or GitHub sync.

Claims and evidence

Drafts should keep claims close to proof.

If the page mentions a dashboard feature, it should match the real dashboard. If it mentions a prompt gap, that gap should be visible in the notes or referenced files.

Ask CLEA to revise

Use the `Improve` mode when you want CLEA to help.

The first Page Writer chat message includes the current page context behind the scenes. It includes the file path, title, URL, description, JSON-LD state, and current markdown content. You can also mention files with `@`.

Move to publishing checks

Move to checks when the draft is saved and readable.

Do not wait for the page to feel perfect before checking basics. But do not run live checks before the URL exists. Page Writer can help with both stages, as long as you use the right tool at the right time.

Next step

Main website