Agent Skills: Article Writer

Edit and refine blog articles and technical posts to match a specific writing style. Use when editing markdown articles, blog posts, or technical writing. Applies conversational, direct, no-BS style with strict guidelines (no em dashes, no empty framing phrases). Best for technical content aimed at experienced developers.

UncategorizedID: alexfazio/cc-skills/article-writer

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Skill Metadata

Name
article-writer
Description
Edit and refine blog articles and technical posts to match a specific writing style. Use when editing markdown articles, blog posts, or technical writing. Applies conversational, direct, no-BS style with strict guidelines (no em dashes, no empty framing phrases). Best for technical content aimed at experienced developers.

Article Writer

Overview

Edit blog articles and technical posts to match a specific writing style: conversational, direct, opinionated, and technically precise. Apply strict style guidelines including banned patterns (em dashes, empty framing phrases) and enforce consistent voice, structure, and formatting.

When to Use This Skill

Activate this skill when:

  • Editing markdown articles or blog posts
  • Refining technical writing for publication
  • Reviewing drafts for style consistency
  • Converting formal writing to conversational style
  • Checking articles for guideline violations

Editing Workflow

Follow this workflow when editing articles:

1. Initial Assessment

Read the article draft completely to understand:

  • Main topic and key points
  • Target audience and technical level
  • Current writing style and tone
  • Overall structure and flow

2. Run Automated Style Check

Before manual editing, run the style checker to identify violations:

python3 scripts/check_style.py <article-file.md>

The checker identifies:

  • Em dashes (— or –)
  • Empty framing phrases ("Here's the thing:", "But here's the reality:", etc.)
  • Excessive hedging words
  • Overly long paragraphs (>6 sentences)

Review the automated findings and keep them in mind during editing.

3. Apply Core Guidelines

Reference references/writing-guidelines.md for banned patterns:

Eliminate em dashes entirely:

  • Replace with commas, periods, colons, or parentheses
  • Example: "The feature—which took weeks—finally shipped" → "The feature, which took weeks, finally shipped"

Remove empty framing phrases:

  • Cut discourse markers that announce rather than state
  • Example: "Here's the thing: your costs are too high" → "Your costs are too high"
  • Common culprits: "Here's the reality:", "The point:", "At the end of the day:"

4. Match the Style Guide

Reference references/style-guide.md for comprehensive style patterns. Focus on these key areas:

Voice & Tone:

  • Conversational and direct (like talking to a peer)
  • Confident and opinionated (no hedging)
  • Second person ("you") for direct address
  • Strategic profanity for emphasis (use sparingly)
  • Contractions throughout (it's, you're, don't)

Structure:

  • Short paragraphs (2-5 sentences typically)
  • One idea per paragraph
  • Headers in sentence case, mostly lowercase
  • Horizontal rules (---) for major section breaks only
  • Frequent bullet points and numbered lists

Emphasis:

  • Bold for key terms and strong emphasis
  • Italics sparingly
  • Inline code with backticks for technical terms
  • Code blocks with language specification

Content Patterns:

  • Strong opening hook (assertion, question, surprising fact)
  • Concrete examples over abstract concepts
  • Specific numbers and data ("20% improvement" not "significant")
  • Address counterarguments directly
  • Actionable advice with clear explanations

Sentence Structure:

  • Vary sentence length for rhythm
  • Mix short punchy sentences with longer explanatory ones
  • Active voice preferred
  • Specific over vague word choice

5. Check Against Example Article

Reference references/example-article.md to see the style in practice. Use it to:

  • Verify tone matches (direct, confident, conversational)
  • Check section structure (headers, paragraphs, lists)
  • Confirm opening and closing patterns
  • Validate technical depth and accessibility balance

6. Final Review Checklist

Before completing edits, verify:

  • [ ] No em dashes anywhere
  • [ ] No empty framing phrases
  • [ ] Paragraphs are 2-5 sentences (with intentional exceptions)
  • [ ] Headers are descriptive and sentence case
  • [ ] Mix of sentence lengths creates good rhythm
  • [ ] Technical terms accurate and properly formatted
  • [ ] Strong opening hook present
  • [ ] Concrete examples throughout
  • [ ] Conversational but authoritative tone
  • [ ] Bold/italics used for emphasis, not decoration

7. Provide Edit Summary

After editing, summarize changes made:

  • List major structural changes
  • Note pattern fixes (em dashes removed, framing phrases cut, etc.)
  • Highlight tone adjustments
  • Mention any sections that needed significant rewriting
  • Flag any areas where style guide couldn't be fully applied (explain why)

Editing Principles

Progressive Enhancement

Edit in passes rather than trying to fix everything at once:

  1. First pass: Structure and flow
  2. Second pass: Voice and tone
  3. Third pass: Guidelines compliance (em dashes, framing phrases)
  4. Fourth pass: Polish and rhythm

Preserve Author's Voice

While enforcing style guidelines:

  • Maintain the author's key points and arguments
  • Keep technical accuracy intact
  • Preserve intentional emphasis
  • Don't over-homogenize; some variation is natural

Explain Significant Changes

When making major edits:

  • Note why the change improves the piece
  • Reference specific guideline violations
  • Suggest alternatives if the change is debatable
  • Explain trade-offs when style conflicts with clarity

Balance Rules with Readability

Guidelines are strong defaults, not absolute laws:

  • Occasionally break rules for clarity or impact
  • Use judgment on sentence and paragraph length
  • Allow strategic rule-breaking when it serves the writing
  • Explain intentional guideline deviations

Common Editing Patterns

Removing Framing Phrases

❌ "Here's the thing: AI is changing development" ✅ "AI is changing development"

❌ "The point is that you need to adapt" ✅ "You need to adapt"

Replacing Em Dashes

❌ "The feature—despite taking weeks—finally shipped" ✅ "The feature, despite taking weeks, finally shipped" ✅ "The feature (despite taking weeks) finally shipped" ✅ "The feature finally shipped. It took weeks."

Shortening Paragraphs

When a paragraph exceeds 5-6 sentences, split it:

  • Find natural break points (topic shifts)
  • Create two focused paragraphs
  • Ensure each has one main idea
  • Add transitions if needed

Strengthening Voice

Weak: "It might be possible that this approach could work" Strong: "This approach works"

Weak: "One should consider using tests" Strong: "Use tests"

Weak: "There are many benefits to AI coding" Strong: "AI coding speeds up development, catches bugs earlier, and lets you ship faster"

Adding Concreteness

Vague: "The performance improved significantly" Concrete: "Latency dropped from 500ms to 50ms"

Vague: "Many developers are adopting AI tools" Concrete: "GitHub's data shows 92% of developers now use AI coding tools"

Resources

references/

writing-guidelines.md - Core banned patterns and why they're problematic:

  • Empty framing phrases (comprehensive list)
  • Em dashes and alternatives
  • Concise explanations of each rule

style-guide.md - Complete style specification covering:

  • Voice & tone (conversational, direct, opinionated)
  • Structure & formatting (paragraphs, headers, lists)
  • Content patterns (openings, examples, actionable advice)
  • Writing mechanics (sentence structure, word choice, rhythm)
  • Final checklist for publishing

example-article.md - Full-length article demonstrating the style:

  • Technical depth (AI coding guide)
  • Target audience (experienced developers)
  • Proper use of all style elements
  • Real-world example of the guidelines in practice

Load these references when editing to ensure consistency with established patterns.

scripts/

check_style.py - Automated style violation detector:

  • Scans markdown files for em dashes and framing phrases
  • Identifies excessive hedging and long paragraphs
  • Provides specific suggestions for fixes
  • Colored terminal output for easy scanning

Run before manual editing to catch mechanical violations quickly. Use the output to guide editing priorities.

Usage:

# Single file
python3 scripts/check_style.py article.md

# Multiple files
python3 scripts/check_style.py article1.md article2.md

# Entire directory
python3 scripts/check_style.py ./articles/

Tips for Best Results

When Editing Lightly

For minor edits (article mostly matches style):

  1. Run check_style.py first
  2. Fix flagged violations
  3. Quick read for tone and flow
  4. Verify checklist items

When Editing Heavily

For major rewrites (article needs significant work):

  1. Read full article to understand intent
  2. Outline key points to preserve
  3. Rewrite section by section
  4. Reference style-guide.md frequently
  5. Compare against example-article.md for tone
  6. Run check_style.py at end
  7. Final polish pass

When Unsure

If style application is ambiguous:

  • Prioritize clarity over strict adherence
  • Explain the reasoning for the choice
  • Offer alternative phrasings
  • Ask the user which approach they prefer

Continuous Improvement

After editing multiple articles:

  • Note recurring issues or patterns
  • Suggest additions to style guide if needed
  • Identify areas where guidelines conflict
  • Recommend script enhancements for new patterns