Oh, dude, like, the present tense is used in recipe writing. You know, so it's all like, "Chop the onions," and "Stir the sauce," not "You will have chopped the onions," or "You stirred the sauce." It's all about keeping it simple and to the point, man.
present tense
present
When writing about literature, the past tense is typically used to discuss events or actions that have already occurred in the text.
Your question is not clear. The tense for the word 'writing' ? The word writing, if it is a verb, is called the present participle. To be past or present it must be with a word like am/is/are or was/were. was writing - past continuous is writing = present continuous But writing can also be a noun and nouns don't show tenses: His writing is very good.
It should be written in present tense.
In writing, the third person present tense is used to narrate events as if they are happening in the present moment, but from an outside perspective. This means that the narrator refers to characters by their names or pronouns like "he," "she," or "they," and describes their actions as they unfold. This tense is commonly used in fiction and nonfiction writing to create a sense of immediacy and objectivity.
B. Shift between past and present tense as often as necessary when writing about literature, but do not use the future tense
It is when a writer switches between tenses. For example, they might begin writing in the present tense but then they switch to writing in the past tense.
The past tense is wrote; the future tense is will write.
Writing
writing
Inappropriate changes would be called "problems with tense." Appropriate use of tense in a literary work involves maintaining the tense throughout the work. If you are writing in the present...verbs are in present tense; if writing in past tense, verbs will be in past tense, etc for future tense.