Tomorro lets you add public comments visible to all participants, as well as private internal comments visible only to members of your organization.
Comments can be added from the review mode if you have the required rights.
Add a private comment
Select a word, sentence, or paragraph in the contract. A black toolbar appears above the selection.
Click the comment icon (💬).
Write your comment, then click Post.
By default, comments are private and only visible to your organization.
A padlock 🔒 appears next to the comment.
The commented text appears in purple, and the comment is added to the Annotations panel on the right.
You can open the comment, reply to it, and mention internal or external participants (depending on your rights).
👉 If you can only mention yourself, add additional participants to the project. See : Adding your collaborators to the project.
Add a public comment
Write your comment as usual.
Before posting, check the External box.
The comment becomes public, identified by a yellow marker with the 🌍 icon.
Click Post to publish it.
The comment is added to the Annotations panel on the right.
Resolve or archive a comment
Open the comment.
Click the Check icon ✔️.
The comment is moved to the Resolved section and removed from open threads.
Share a comment
Click the … menu on the comment.
Select Copy the link.
The copied link opens the project directly on the comment.
Edit a comment
Click the … menu on the comment.
Select Edit comment.
⚠️ Comment edit history is not saved.
The comment will display the Edited label.
Delete a comment
Open the comment.
Click the … menu, then Delete thread.
🚨 Deletion is permanent.
Filter comments
Use annotation filters
In the Annotations tab, open the All threads dropdown and select the annotation categories you want to display.
Show annotations that require your attention
With the For you filter, you can now display only:
Annotations where you are mentioned
Replies to threads you started
Comments that specifically require your review
This filter automatically gathers all annotations that concern you so you can focus on what truly matters.











