Migrate from quillbot to chatgpt.
1 documentation-derived translation pattern — what carries over and what to watch for. Cited to the Feature Parity Map; the audit tells you whether the move is worth it.
Reproduce QuillBot's paraphrasing modes as prompts in ChatGPT Canvas. Paste the text into Canvas (writing mode) and ask ChatGPT to rewrite it; Canvas's built-in controls map onto QuillBot modes - 'adjust the reading level' covers Simple/Academic, 'change the length' covers Shorten/Expand, and a free-form instruction ('make this more formal', 'rephrase for fluency', 'humanize this') reproduces the named modes. Use Canvas inline highlighting to target a single sentence the way QuillBot's per-sentence rephrasing works, and use version history to compare alternatives instead of QuillBot's compare-modes view. This replaces a single-purpose paraphraser with a general writing assistant that also drafts, edits code, and answers questions in the same surface.
- Warning: ChatGPT is generative and non-deterministic: it does not preserve the original meaning as conservatively as QuillBot's Standard mode, and it may add or invent content unless you constrain the prompt to 'rephrase only, keep all facts'. QuillBot is purpose-built to retain meaning.
- Warning: There is no Synonym Slider or AI thesaurus equivalent; per-word synonym browsing must be done by asking 'give me synonyms for X', which is clunkier than QuillBot's click-a-word UI.
- Warning: Canvas requires a paid ChatGPT plan (Plus and up) and is not an always-on inline overlay - QuillBot's browser extension and Word add-in rewrite in place across the web, whereas Canvas lives inside ChatGPT, so you lose in-context rewriting wherever you happen to be typing.