Example reports
These examples are synthetic. They show the shape and language of Sills output without claiming that any real product was audited.
Use them to understand how a report separates observed evidence, automated results, inference, and manual-review requirements. Real audit folders may include more files, screenshots, logs, coverage inventories, raw tool output, and specialist reports.
What to look for
- Scope: what the audit inspected and what it did not inspect.
- Evidence labels: whether a statement came from direct observation, automated tooling, inference, documentation, or manual review.
- Findings: severity, confidence, user impact, reproduction, recommendation, and verification.
- Handoff: instructions that let a later remediation agent fix issues without overwriting audit evidence.
Examples
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"Example: web product audit"
This synthetic example shows how a Sills full audit can summarize a web product review. It is intentionally abbreviated.
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"Example: changed-code audit"
This synthetic example shows how Sills can report on a narrow change set instead of a full product review.
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"Example: accessibility specialist report"
This synthetic example shows a specialist accessibility report that can sit inside a larger audit folder.