These actions are not separate tools or buttons in Aimogen. They are instruction-based editing modes inside the AI Content Editor. What happens depends entirely on what you tell the AI to do.
There is no fixed workflow, no presets, and no protected preview layer. The AI edits the content directly, and any rollback depends on WordPress revisions.
How These Actions Are Triggered #
Rewrite, summarize, translate, and paraphrase are all performed by:
- selecting content (or full content)
- entering a clear instruction
- applying the edit
Aimogen does not distinguish between these actions internally. They are all variations of content transformation.
Rewrite #
A rewrite replaces the selected content with a new version that preserves meaning but changes structure, tone, or clarity.
Typical rewrite intents:
- improve readability
- change tone (formal, casual, technical)
- rewrite for a different audience
- clean up AI-generated drafts
- modernize old content
A rewrite fully replaces the selected text. The original version is not preserved by Aimogen.
Summarize #
Summarization condenses the selected content into a shorter version while preserving key points.
Common use cases:
- turning long sections into short explanations
- creating TL;DR summaries
- reducing word count
- extracting key ideas
Summarization always removes information. It should be used carefully on long or complex content.
Translate #
Translation replaces the selected content with a version written in another language.
Important characteristics:
- the original language text is overwritten
- formatting may change slightly depending on language
- idioms and phrasing are adapted, not copied literally
Aimogen does not store the original language version. If you need both, you must keep a copy manually or use revisions.
Paraphrase #
Paraphrasing rewrites the content while keeping structure closer to the original than a full rewrite.
It’s commonly used for:
- avoiding repetition
- improving clarity
- light SEO variation
- refining tone without restructuring
Paraphrasing is usually less aggressive than rewriting, but still replaces the original text completely.
Scope Matters #
All four actions can be applied to:
- a selected sentence
- a paragraph
- multiple paragraphs
- the entire post
Only the selected scope is modified. In Classic Editor, failing to select text means the entire content is replaced.
No Preview, No AI Undo #
Once applied:
- the content is replaced immediately
- Aimogen does not keep a backup
- there is no preview or comparison view
- there is no AI-specific undo
The only way to revert is via WordPress revisions, if they are enabled and available.
Reverting Changes #
If revisions are enabled:
- AI edits are saved as normal revisions
- you can revert using WordPress’ revision system
If revisions are disabled or purged:
- the change is permanent
Aimogen does not manage revision storage.
Model Choice Matters #
For these actions, models that:
- follow instructions precisely
- preserve meaning
- handle long context well
perform better than highly creative models.
You can override the model per edit without affecting global settings.
Best Practices #
- save the post before applying edits
- work in small sections
- be explicit in instructions
- avoid stacking multiple transformations at once
- review formatting after applying changes
Treat each edit as final unless you know revisions are available.
Summary #
Rewrite, summarize, translate, and paraphrase are instruction-driven transformations inside the AI Content Editor. They replace content immediately, without preview or AI undo. Reverting is possible only through WordPress revisions, if enabled. The power is high, the safety net is WordPress, and control depends on how deliberately you apply each edit.