About Muhammad
Muhammad Umair is a writer, editor, and the founder of TextKit. He built TextKit after years of being frustrated by online text tools that worked but never explained themselves — widgets with no context, no use cases, and no accountability for accuracy.
His writing focuses on the craft of working with text: how word counts shape reading experience, how Unicode makes fancy fonts possible (and where they break), how readability formulas actually work, and how to write bios, captions, and titles that fit platform limits without losing meaning.
Muhammad personally writes and edits every tool guide on TextKit and reviews the technical accuracy of each piece before it's published. Technical content involving typography, accessibility, or encoding is additionally reviewed by named experts listed in the experts directory.
What Muhammad writes about
- Word counts, character limits, and how length affects readability and SEO
- Unicode fancy fonts — how they work, where they display, and accessibility trade-offs
- Readability formulas (Flesch, Flesch-Kincaid, Gunning Fog) and what they actually measure
- Case conversion and naming conventions for developers (camelCase, snake_case, kebab-case)
- Social media bios, captions, and platform-specific writing strategy
- Text encodings (ASCII, UTF-8, Base64, URL encoding) explained for non-developers
Editorial standards
Muhammad holds every TextKit page to the standards in the editorial policy: original writing, fact-checked claims, clear sourcing, and visible "last reviewed" dates. If a piece of content isn't something he'd put his own name on, it doesn't get published.
Get in touch
Reach out via email or LinkedIn for corrections, questions, or collaboration ideas.