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To Do, Review, and FYI: how Rosey organizes findings

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Written by Erik Ross

After a run, Rosey organizes everything it found into three tabs in the side panel. The tab a finding lands in tells you what kind of attention it needs.

To Do

Things you should look at before you ship the document. These are findings Rosey is confident matter — for example, an unsupported financial claim, a missing call-to-action, or a passage that contradicts the supporting material.

A To Do finding has:

  • A severity label (HIGH, MED) and a reviewer label (e.g., ACCURACY, CFO).

  • A title and a description of the issue.

  • A link to the supporting source if applicable.

  • Dismiss and Go to document buttons.

Review

Tracked-change edits Rosey has applied that meaningfully change the document. Each one is waiting for your decision. Rosey will never make a non-minor change without surfacing it here for your review. (Minor corrections — typos, formatting — are applied silently and summarized in the FYI tab.)

A Review finding has the same structure as a To Do, plus:

  • A green checkmark to accept the suggested edit (applies the tracked change).

  • A red × to reject it (rejects the tracked change).

FYI

Things Rosey wants to flag but that don't require action. This includes:

  • Silent edits Rosey applied (typos, formatting).

  • Observations and color from reviewers — for example, a reviewer noting tone, framing, or context.

  • Things that would be nice to know about but aren't problems.

Filtering findings

Above the tabs you'll find reviewer pills — one for each reviewer, plus All Experts. Click any reviewer's pill to show or hide their findings; multiple reviewers can be visible at the same time.

The Show resolved toggle on the right of the panel hides or shows findings you've already accepted, rejected, or dismissed.

The "At Cursor" panel

When your cursor is near content Rosey has reviewed, the At Cursor panel at the bottom of the side panel surfaces what's relevant to that location:

  • Findings. Click any entry to jump to that finding in the panel above.

  • Supported claims. Click any entry to open the supporting material in your browser, scrolled to where the claim is verified.

This makes it easy to see all reviewer commentary on one passage, or to trace a number back to its source.

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