Text Analysis Tools
Text analysis tools for editing, counting, extracting, and transforming text
Text analysis tools bring together the online text tools you need to inspect, clean, convert, and reshape text for the task in front of you. This category collects Gouho utilities for changing case, counting words, editing copy, extracting text from images, and handling closely related text workflows so you can move directly to the right next click.
The easiest way to use this collection is to choose by job, not by tool name. If your text is already editable, start with an editor, counter, or formatter. If the content is locked inside an image or JPG file, extract it first and then move to cleanup, styling, or measurement.
Browse text tools by task
Format and transform text
- Case Converter for switching text into upper case, lower case, title case, or sentence case.
- Reverse Text Generator and Small Text Generator for display-focused text transformations.
- Word Combiner for joining terms into naming ideas, tags, or compact copy variations.
Edit and organize text
- Online Text Editor when you need one place to revise, clean, or prepare text before sharing it.
- Comma Separator when lists, keywords, names, or values need a consistent delimiter structure.
Measure text before publishing
- Word Counter when word limits, content briefs, product descriptions, or social copy need a quick length check.
Extract text from images and files
- Image to Text for turning screenshots, scans, or photos into editable text.
- JPG to Word when the next step is a document workflow rather than a plain-text output.
Use adjacent quick-conversion utilities when needed
- RGB to Hex supports text-heavy content handoffs where labels, style notes, and color values need to be handled together.
Choose the right path before you start
If your priority is readability or consistency, begin with formatting and cleanup tools. If your priority is length, measure the text before you finalize the copy. If your source is an image, extraction should come first; only after the content is editable does it make sense to count it, clean it, or restyle it.
This order helps avoid a common mistake: opening a styling or counting tool before you have usable text. In many cases, the fastest path is extract first, clean second, then transform or measure.
Example: from photographed notes to finished copy
Suppose you have a JPG of meeting notes and need clean text for a document or content draft. Start with Image to Text or JPG to Word so the content becomes editable. Then use the Online Text Editor to clean the draft, standardize headings with the Case Converter, and finish with the Word Counter if the final version needs to fit a limit or brief.