--- title: Building a Custom Module --- Quill's core strength as an editor is its rich API and powerful customization capabilities. As you implement functionality on top of Quill's API, it may be convenient to organize this as a module. For the purpose of this guide, we will walk through one way to build a word counter module, a commonly found feature in many word processors. _Note: Internally modules are how much of Quill's functionality is organized. You can overwrite these default [modules](/docs/modules/) by implementing your own and registering it with the same name._ ### Counting Words At its core a word counter simply counts the number of words in the editor and displays this value in some UI. Thus we need to: 1. Listen for text changes in Quill. 1. Count the number of words. 1. Display this value. Let's jump straight in with a complete example! That's all it takes to add a custom module to Quill! A function can be [registered](/docs/api/#quillregistermodule/) as a module and it will be passed the corresponding Quill editor object along with any options. ### Using Options Modules are passed an options object that can be used to fine tune the desired behavior. We can use this to accept a selector for the counter container instead of a hard-coded string. Let's also customize the counter to either count words or characters: ### Constructors Since any function can be registered as a Quill module, we could have implemented our counter as an ES5 constructor or ES6 class. This allows us to access and utilize the module directly. ### Wrapping It All Up Now let's polish off the module in ES6 and fix a few pesky bugs. That's all there is to it!