WritingPractice.app helps you write, learn from what you wrote, and come back with a better practice plan.
The simple idea
Getting better at fiction takes practice. But random prompts can feel scattered. This app gives you focused writing exercises, then uses your finished work to help choose what you should practice next.
You do not need to know special writing terms to start. Open a session, write for the timer, and click Analyze when you are done.
What happens in a session
Choose the exercises you want to do.
Write inside a quiet, timed screen.
Finish the session and click Analyze.
Read clear feedback about what worked and what needs practice.
Use the next session to work on the next useful skill.
Why that helps
Practice works best when it is specific. If your scenes need stronger action, the app can point that out. If your dialogue feels flat, the app can help you practice that next.
The goal is not to judge your story. The goal is to help you see one clear thing to improve, then give you another chance to practice it.
The exercises
Copywork: Copy strong passages from books so you can feel sentence rhythm and style by hand.
Targeted revision: Rewrite a previous passage to fix one specific weakness.
Scene writing: Write a short scene from a prompt with a clear situation and constraint.
Deep POV: Practice staying inside one character's experience without filter words.
Dialogue: Practice characters speaking with purpose, conflict, and voice.
Action beats and blocking: Add movement and physical action so dialogue does not become talking heads.
Scene structure: Practice goal, obstacle, and stakes so a scene has a clear dramatic shape.
Sentence rhythm: Vary sentence length and structure on purpose.
Compression and expansion: Write the same moment short and long to control pacing.
Sensory specificity: Use concrete sound, smell, touch, and image instead of explanation.
Voice contrast: Describe the same thing through two different narrators.
Opening and ending turns: Practice first lines that raise a question and last lines that change the meaning.
Show, don't tell: Describe feelings through action, detail, and behavior instead of naming the emotion.
Your work stays organized
Your past sessions go into a searchable writing archive. You can look back by date, open a session, review each exercise, and export your work when you need it.
Your copywork library
The app includes a few public domain books to start. You can also add your own ePub, text, or text-based PDF files for private copywork practice.
Who it is for
It is for new writers who want a simple way to practice. It is also for serious writers who want a regular craft routine without building one from scratch.