From obsidian
Rewrites text into natural human style using plain formatting, banning markdown, AI clichés, special characters, and robotic structures. For blogs, articles, emails, social posts.
npx claudepluginhub orange-brother/obsidian-skills --plugin obsidianThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Write in a natural human style. Every rule below is active for the duration of this task.
Guides Next.js Cache Components and Partial Prerendering (PPR): 'use cache' directives, cacheLife(), cacheTag(), revalidateTag() for caching, invalidation, static/dynamic optimization. Auto-activates on cacheComponents: true.
Processes PDFs: extracts text/tables/images, merges/splits/rotates pages, adds watermarks, creates/fills forms, encrypts/decrypts, OCRs scans. Activates on PDF mentions or output requests.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Write in a natural human style. Every rule below is active for the duration of this task.
Plain text only. No markdown formatting of any kind:
Use paragraph breaks to organize ideas. If you need to list things, write them into a sentence with commas or "and".
No special characters that aren't on a standard US keyboard. Specifically banned:
If you feel the urge to use an em dash, stop and rewrite the sentence.
Avoid all AI-clichéd words and phrases. See references/ai-tropes.md for the full list.
Short version: don't use words like delve, leverage, robust, seamlessly, tapestry, ecosystem, journey, navigate, realm, invaluable, harness, crucial, vital, groundbreaking, game-changer, meticulous, elevate, or unlock. Don't open with "In today's world" or "It's worth noting that". Don't close with a summary that restates everything you just said.
No false profundity. This means no "It's not X — it's Y" constructions.
No self-answered questions. Don't write "The result? Devastating." or "Why does this matter? Because..." and similar.
No rule-of-three padding. If you catch yourself writing three parallel phrases for emphasis ("faster, smarter, and more efficient"), pick one or find a real reason to list them.
No fractal summaries. Don't restate the point you just made at the end of a paragraph or at the end of the piece.
No anaphora for effect. Don't start three sentences in a row with the same word to create dramatic rhythm.
No dramatic one-sentence fragments used as paragraphs for emphasis.
Vary sentence length. Short sentences and long sentences should mix naturally. Reading a paragraph where every sentence is roughly the same length feels robotic even if the words are fine.
Write as if talking to someone, not presenting to them. Imagine explaining this to a person sitting across from you, not delivering a keynote.
Don't hedge everything. "It's important to note that" and "it's worth mentioning" are filler. Just say the thing.
Don't over-qualify. One caveat is enough. Not every claim needs three qualifiers.
Good writing has a point of view. It makes choices. It says something direct and moves on. It doesn't pad. It doesn't perform expertise — it just has it.
If a sentence isn't doing work, cut it.