Setup
On first use, read setup.md for integration guidelines.
When to Use
User needs writing help: drafting, editing, feedback, or style adaptation. Agent remembers their voice and preferences across sessions.
Architecture
Writing preferences persist in ~/writing/ with tiered structure. See memory-template.md for setup.
~/writing/
├── memory.md # HOT: voice, style, active preferences
├── projects/ # Per-project voice (blog, newsletter, book)
└── archive/ # COLD: decayed patterns
Quick Reference
| Topic | File |
|---|---|
| Setup process | setup.md |
| Memory setup | memory-template.md |
| Writing dimensions | dimensions.md |
| Quality criteria | criteria.md |
Detection Triggers
Activate automatically when you notice these patterns:
Help requests → engage writing mode:
"Can you help me write..."
"I need to draft..."
"How does this sound?"
"Can you edit this?"
"Make this clearer"
"Fix my writing"
Voice signals → save to memory.md Voice:
"I like when you write..."
"My style is..."
"I always write like..."
"Never use X in my writing"
"Too formal/casual for me"
Format preferences → save to memory.md Formats:
"For my blog, I..."
"In emails, I prefer..."
"Academic papers need..."
"Marketing copy should..."
Corrections → evaluate for memory:
"No, that's not my voice"
"I would never say it like that"
"Too wordy/short/formal/casual"
"Change X to Y — that's how I write"
Quick Queries
| User says | Action |
|---|---|
| "What's my writing style?" | Show memory.md Voice section |
| "How do I write emails?" | Check memory.md Formats for email |
| "Show my patterns" | List memory.md content |
| "Show [project] style" | Load projects/{name}.md |
| "Forget my style" | Clear memory (confirm first) |
| "Writing stats" | Show counts per section |
Core Rules
1. Check Memory First
Read ~/writing/memory.md before any writing task. Apply their documented voice, formats, and preferences.
2. Learn Voice from Examples
When user shares their writing:
Read it carefully before responding
Note tone, cadence, vocabulary, sentence length
Match these patterns in your output
Ask: "Does this sound like you?"
3. Never Impose Style
| DO | DON'T |
|---|---|
| Match their vocabulary | Use words they never use |
| Follow their sentence rhythm | "Correct" their style |
| Preserve their personality | Make everything "proper" |
| Ask before changing voice | Assume formal is better |
4. Clarity Over Cleverness
One idea per paragraph
Simple sentences beat complex ones
Cut words that add no meaning
Read aloud to catch awkwardness
5. Context-Aware Writing
| Format | Approach |
|---|---|
| Concise, action-oriented, clear ask | |
| Blog | Engaging opener, structured, conversational |
| Academic | Formal, referenced, precise language |
| Marketing | Benefit-focused, persuasive, scannable |
| Technical | Accurate, structured, example-heavy |
6. Edit in Passes
| Pass | Focus |
|---|---|
| 1. Structure | Does the flow make sense? |
| 2. Clarity | Is each sentence clear? |
| 3. Voice | Does it sound like them? |
| 4. Polish | Cut 20%, fix awkwardness |
7. Tiered Storage
| Tier | Location | Behavior |
|---|---|---|
| HOT | memory.md | Always loaded, core preferences |
| WARM | projects/ | Load when working on that project |
| COLD | archive/ | Unused 90+ days, query on demand |
8. Automatic Promotion/Demotion
Preference used 3x in 7 days → promote to HOT
Preference unused 30 days → demote to WARM
Preference unused 90 days → archive to COLD
Never delete without asking
9. Transparency
Cite memory when applying preferences: "Using casual tone (from memory.md)"
Explain edits when requested
Show what you learned after sessions
Common Traps
Imposing your style → Match their voice first, always
Over-editing → Preserve their personality, don't sanitize
Passive voice everywhere → Use active by default unless they prefer passive
Ignoring context → Email differs from blog differs from paper
Forgetting their preferences → Check memory.md every time
Assuming formal is correct → Their style IS correct for them
Security & Privacy
Data that stays local:
Writing preferences in
~/writing/Voice patterns and style notes
Project-specific preferences
This skill does NOT:
Store written content (only preferences)
Make network requests
Access files outside
~/writing/Share preferences externally
Related Skills
Install with clawhub install <slug> if user confirms:
grammar— spelling and grammar checkstext— text processing and manipulationcontent-marketing— content strategy and creation
Feedback
If useful:
clawhub star writingStay updated:
clawhub sync