> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.pensiv.so/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# 10.3.3 Use multiple editor presets

> What editor presets are, where to set them, using them by stage

Editor presets are **saved sets of editing settings** for when you write.

You can save font, size, line spacing, paragraph spacing, and similar options as one style and switch to it when needed.

You can use different presets for reading vs. writing.

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## What are editor presets?

Editor presets are predefined sets of how the editor looks and behaves.

Examples:

* Font
* Font size
* Line spacing
* Paragraph spacing
* Alignment

The **content** stays the same; only the **way it’s displayed** changes.

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## Where do I set them?

1. Open a file.
2. Click **Settings** in the header.
3. In the editor settings area, choose a preset.

It applies immediately.

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## When to use which

### 1️⃣ Focused writing

* Wider line spacing
* Larger font
* Layout that keeps attention on the text

Good for long writing sessions.

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### 2️⃣ Editing and proofreading

* Tighter line spacing
* Clear paragraph breaks
* Layout that makes structure easy to see

Useful when revising.

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### 3️⃣ Readability check

* Layout closer to what a reader sees
* Check paragraph flow

Use when checking rhythm and pacing.

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### 4️⃣ Submission prep

* Layout matched to platform or submission rules
* Check margins and alignment

Use for final checks before submitting.

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## What presets are for

Presets are not just cosmetic.

* Writing stage
* Structure check
* Revision
* Submission

They switch **how you look at the text** by stage.

The same text can feel different when the layout changes.

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## How to use them

* First draft: focus preset
* Mid-stage: structure-check preset
* Final pass: submission preset

Switching presets by stage keeps work efficient.

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## Summary

* Editor presets are saved editor settings.
* You switch them in Settings; they apply right away.
* Content is unchanged; only the display changes.
* Using them per stage improves efficiency.

Editor presets don’t change the words; they change **how you see the words**.
