From prl-skills
Designs figure strategy for Physical Review Letters manuscripts, focusing on high-impact figures that carry the central result within length limits.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/prl-skills:prl-figuresThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
- You have many candidate figures and need to choose a few
A Letter carries a few high-impact figures only — typically on the order of three or four, sometimes fewer. Every figure must earn its place against the deductible length limit (figures consume the word budget; see prl-length-management). The hierarchy:
If a figure does not advance the single central claim or one essential support, move it to SM.
| Principle | Practice |
|---|---|
| One glance, one message | The eye should land on the central result immediately |
| Self-explaining | Headline readable from figure + caption, without the body |
| Schematic + data | A small schematic/inset can orient out-of-subfield readers |
| Theory vs. experiment overlaid | Show the decisive comparison directly, not in separate panels |
| Annotate the key feature | Arrow / label on the peak, transition, or scaling that matters |
【Figure count】N — each essential? yes / cut list
【Fig. 1 conveys central result at a glance】yes / redesign
【Per-figure single point】list
【Legibility at column width】pass / fix
【Color-blind / grayscale safe】yes / fix
【Moved to SM】list
【Next】prl-supplementary (SM) or prl-length-management (fit limit)
Figure formatting and length-counting rules are durable in spirit but specific in detail — verify current figure and length-deduction rules on the official APS / PRL author page.
npx claudepluginhub brycewang-stanford/awesome-journal-skills --plugin prl-skillsAudits whether manuscript figures support their claims across 8 rhetorical dimensions: chart-type fit, axis design, visual hierarchy, data density, caption clarity, perceptual accuracy, and narrative arc.
Plans which figures and tables to include in a research paper, where to place them, and what purpose they serve. Uses reviewer-level standards to identify essential vs. redundant visuals.
Enforces Science figure standards: panel/word budget, column-width sizing, font legibility, colorblind-safe palettes, data display (points over bars), and figure legend structure. Use before submission.