Tab Fatigue: The Hidden Cost of the Copy-Paste-to-ChatGPT Loop

You do it without thinking now. Highlight the clumsy sentence. Cmd+Tab to the browser. Find the ChatGPT tab. Paste. Type “make this more professional.” Wait. Copy the result. Cmd+Tab back. Find your cursor. Paste. Fix the formatting it broke.

That’s the loop. It feels like nothing — five seconds, maybe ten. But you do it dozens of times a day, and the real cost isn’t the seconds. It’s what the loop does to your attention.

The loop, counted

A single “ask ChatGPT to fix this” round-trip is roughly:

  1. Select the text
  2. Switch to the browser (Cmd/Alt+Tab, then find the right window)
  3. Find or open the ChatGPT tab
  4. Paste
  5. Type the instruction
  6. Wait 5–10 seconds for the response
  7. Select and copy the result
  8. Switch back to your app
  9. Re-find your cursor / re-select what to replace
  10. Paste
  11. Clean up the formatting it flattened and any “Sure, here’s…” text

Eleven steps and two context switches for one edit. Do that 30 times in a workday and you’ve made 60 context switches purely to shuttle text in and out of a browser.

Why the switches cost more than the seconds

The stopwatch undersells it. The expensive part is cognitive:

This is “tab fatigue”: the slow drain of shuttling between your work and a browser AI tool, over and over, until you’re tired in a way you can’t quite point at.

How to break the loop

1. Reduce switches, not just seconds

The goal isn’t a faster browser tab — it’s not leaving your document at all. Any solution that keeps you in the app you’re already typing in beats a faster version of the round-trip.

2. Use an inline editor that edits in place

An inline AI editor collapses all eleven steps into three: select → press a hotkey → the rewrite replaces your text right there. No browser, no paste, no switching, no re-finding your cursor. The edit happens where you are. That’s the entire category, and it exists specifically to kill this loop.

3. Make sure the inline tool doesn’t reintroduce friction

The catch: a bad inline tool brings the friction back in new forms — it fails silently in your Electron apps (so you fall back to the browser anyway), strips your formatting (step 11 returns), or freezes the cursor (a new wait). To actually escape the loop, the inline tool has to be reliable, formatting-safe, and fast. Otherwise you’ve traded one friction for another.

How EditSnappy fixes this at the root

EditSnappy exists to delete the tab dance. Select text in any app, press one hotkey, and the rewrite swaps in — no browser, no copy-paste, no context switch. One step instead of eleven.

And it’s built so it doesn’t quietly hand you back to the browser:

See how EditSnappy works and try editing without ever leaving your document — free, no credit card.


Part of the Why Inline AI Editors Fail troubleshooting hub · EditSnappy home.