Skip to main content
Never lose your work. doXmind automatically saves versions of your document as you write, making it easy to review changes and restore previous versions.

Automatic Snapshots

Your document is automatically saved:
  • At regular intervals as you work
  • When significant changes are made
  • Before major AI edits
You don’t need to do anything - version history works in the background.

Viewing Version History

1

Open version panel

Click the history icon in the sidebar or toolbar to open the version history panel.
2

Browse versions

Scroll through the list of saved versions, organized by date and time.
3

Select a version

Click on a version to see what your document looked like at that point.

Diff View

When viewing a previous version, the diff view highlights what changed:
  • Green highlighting shows text that was added
  • Red highlighting shows text that was removed
This makes it easy to see exactly what changed between versions.

Restoring a Version

1

Find the version

Browse through your version history to find the version you want to restore.
2

Preview the content

Review the version to make sure it’s the one you want.
3

Click Restore

Click the “Restore” button to revert your document to this version.
4

Continue editing

Your document is now restored. A new version is created automatically, so you can always go back if needed.
Restoring a version replaces your current document content. However, a new version snapshot is created before the restore, so you can always undo the restore if needed.

Use Cases

  • Undo major changes - Accidentally deleted a section? Restore from before the deletion.
  • Compare approaches - Tried different ways to write something? Compare versions to pick the best one.
  • Recover from AI edits - If an AI edit didn’t turn out as expected, quickly restore the previous version.
  • Review your progress - See how your document evolved over time.
Before making major edits or asking the AI to make significant changes, your document is automatically saved. You can always restore if the result isn’t what you expected.