Even the best editors can miss small redline changes that cause big problems later — broken references, missing definitions, and inconsistencies across versions.
That’s where Potential Redline Issues comes in.
🔍 What It Does
This feature automatically detects when redline edits may break references or definitions, helping you review smarter and safer.
It focuses on two main categories:
1️⃣ Cross-References Affected by Redlines
Flags when section, article, or paragraph references may no longer be correct after edits.
📘 Example:
- “Section 1.2” → becomes “Section 1.3” → all references to Section 1.2 are flagged.

- “Section 7” deleted → all references to Section 7 are flagged.

2️⃣ Defined Terms Affected by Redlines
Flags when a defined term is deleted in a redline.
📘 Example:
- Defined term “Agreement” deleted → flagged under Defined Terms Affected by Redlines.

💡 Why It Matters
🔹 Prevents broken cross-references — No more missing or incorrect links between sections.
🔹 Protects critical definitions — Ensures key terms aren’t lost during heavy editing.
🔹 Centralized review — All redline-driven risks appear in one clean, reviewable place.
🚀 Review with Confidence
Potential Redline Issues helps you stay in control of complex edits, maintain document integrity, and avoid costly mistakes before they happen.