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Found 61 Skills
Typst Academic Paper Assistant (supports Chinese and English papers, conference/journal submissions). Domains: Deep Learning, Time Series, Industrial Control, Computer Science. Trigger Words (any module can be called independently): - "compile", "compile", "typst compile" → Compilation Module - "format", "format check", "lint" → Format Check Module - "grammar", "grammar", "proofread", "polish" → Grammar Analysis Module - "long sentence", "long sentence", "simplify", "decompose" → Complex Sentence Analysis Module - "academic tone", "academic expression", "improve writing" → Academic Expression Module - "logic", "coherence", "logic", "cohesion", "methodology", "methodology" → Logical Cohesion & Methodology Depth Module - "translate", "translate", "Chinese to English" → Translation Module - "bib", "bibliography", "bibliography" → Bibliography Module - "deai", "de-AI", "humanize", "reduce AI traces" → De-AI Editing Module - "title", "title", "title optimization", "create title" → Title Optimization Module - "template", "template", "IEEE", "ACM" → Template Configuration Module
Quick guide to choosing the right creative writing skill. Use when you need help deciding which creative writing skill to use for a specific task - brainstorming vs documentation, critique vs writing, etc.
Prose drafting technique for narrative fiction. Use when writing new scenes, chapters, or dialogue — whether in conversation with an author or producing a draft autonomously from a brief. Covers craft fundamentals; project-specific voice comes from style files passed alongside this skill.
Arc structure, narrative design, and pacing at multiple scales — saga, arc, chapter, scene. Use when structuring story at any level, planning arcs, designing chapter outlines, or evaluating whether narrative structure serves the story's goals. Not prescriptive about methodology.
Industrial AI literature research with mandatory intake questions, venue-aware source prioritization, structured report outputs, and survey draft generation. Use when the user needs up-to-date research on predictive maintenance, intelligent scheduling, industrial anomaly detection, smart manufacturing, cyber-physical systems, edge AI for automation, or crossover robotics-for-industry topics. Also trigger for adjacent terms: "digital twin", "industrial IoT", "Industry 4.0", "manufacturing AI", "factory automation", "process optimization", or "survey draft" in industrial contexts.
토스(Toss) UX 라이팅 가이드를 기반으로 제품 내 모든 문구를 검수하고 교정합니다. 해요체, 능동형, 긍정형, 캐주얼 경어, 명사 조합 회피 등 5가지 핵심 원칙과 예외 규칙을 적용합니다.
Story brainstorming capture — minimal notes that preserve creative freedom. Use when exploring narrative ideas, discussing characters, planning chapters, or thinking through story possibilities. Supports interactive conversation and autonomous report mode for fan-out exploration.
Adversarial reading methodology for narrative fiction — find what doesn't work, not confirm what does. Focus-area driven with dedicated resources per area. Use when reviewing drafts, evaluating prose quality, or assessing changes at any stage.
Context scoping for writing agent spawns — use when deciding what context a spawned agent should receive, whether ephemeral story decisions should be materialized before handoff, and how much to pass. Poor context handoffs cause writers to invent contradictions and critics to miss relevant history.
Use when creating a new skill with maximum quality. Launches 3 parallel competing approaches (skill-creator, superpowers writing-skills, and manual), compares results on 5 dimensions, then synthesizes the best elements into a final skill. Triggers on "build a skill", "create a skill", "new skill".
Diagnose what any story needs regardless of its current state. This skill should be used when a writer is stuck, evaluating story problems, when narrative feels broken, or when someone asks 'what's wrong with my story?'. Keywords: story, diagnosis, stuck, narrative, plot, character, worldbuilding, revision.
Transform predictable story elements into fresh, original versions. Use when something feels generic, when feedback says "I've seen this before," when elements orbit the protagonist too conveniently, or when you want to make a familiar trope feel new. Applies the 8-step CTF process and Orthogonality Principle.