every-style-editor
This skill should be used when reviewing or editing copy to ensure adherence to Every's style guide. It provides a systematic line-by-line review process for grammar, punctuation, mechanics, and style guide compliance.
Packaged view
This page reorganizes the original catalog entry around fit, installability, and workflow context first. The original raw source lives below.
Install command
npx @skill-hub/cli install nbbaier-compound-engineering-amp-every-style-editor
Repository
Skill path: skills/every-style-editor
This skill should be used when reviewing or editing copy to ensure adherence to Every's style guide. It provides a systematic line-by-line review process for grammar, punctuation, mechanics, and style guide compliance.
Open repositoryBest for
Primary workflow: Write Technical Docs.
Technical facets: Full Stack, Tech Writer.
Target audience: everyone.
License: Unknown.
Original source
Catalog source: SkillHub Club.
Repository owner: nbbaier.
This is still a mirrored public skill entry. Review the repository before installing into production workflows.
What it helps with
- Install every-style-editor into Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI, or OpenCode workflows
- Review https://github.com/nbbaier/compound-engineering-amp before adding every-style-editor to shared team environments
- Use every-style-editor for development workflows
Works across
Favorites: 0.
Sub-skills: 0.
Aggregator: No.
Original source / Raw SKILL.md
--- name: every-style-editor description: This skill should be used when reviewing or editing copy to ensure adherence to Every's style guide. It provides a systematic line-by-line review process for grammar, punctuation, mechanics, and style guide compliance. --- # Every Style Editor This skill provides a systematic approach to reviewing copy against Every's comprehensive style guide. It transforms Claude into a meticulous line editor and proofreader specializing in grammar, mechanics, and style guide compliance. ## When to Use This Skill Use this skill when: - Reviewing articles, blog posts, newsletters, or any written content - Ensuring copy follows Every's specific style conventions - Providing feedback on grammar, punctuation, and mechanics - Flagging deviations from the Every style guide - Preparing clean copy for human editorial review ## Skill Overview This skill enables performing a comprehensive review of written content in four phases: 1. **Initial Assessment** - Understanding context and document type 2. **Detailed Line Edit** - Checking every sentence for compliance 3. **Mechanical Review** - Verifying formatting and consistency 4. **Recommendations** - Providing actionable improvement suggestions ## How to Use This Skill ### Step 1: Initial Assessment Begin by reading the entire piece to understand: - Document type (article, knowledge base entry, social post, etc.) - Target audience - Overall tone and voice - Content context ### Step 2: Detailed Line Edit Review each paragraph systematically, checking for: - Sentence structure and grammar correctness - Punctuation usage (commas, semicolons, em dashes, etc.) - Capitalization rules (especially job titles, headlines) - Word choice and usage (overused words, passive voice) - Adherence to Every style guide rules Reference the complete [EVERY_WRITE_STYLE.md](./references/EVERY_WRITE_STYLE.md) for specific rules when in doubt. ### Step 3: Mechanical Review Verify: - Spacing and formatting consistency - Style choices applied uniformly throughout - Special elements (lists, quotes, citations) - Proper use of italics and formatting - Number formatting (numerals vs. spelled out) - Link formatting and descriptions ### Step 4: Output Results Present findings using this structure: ``` DOCUMENT REVIEW SUMMARY ===================== Document Type: [type] Word Count: [approximate] Overall Assessment: [brief overview] ERRORS FOUND: [total number] DETAILED CORRECTIONS =================== [For each error found:] **Location**: [Paragraph #, Sentence #] **Issue Type**: [Grammar/Punctuation/Mechanics/Style Guide] **Original**: "[exact text with error]" **Correction**: "[corrected text]" **Rule Reference**: [Specific style guide rule violated] **Explanation**: [Brief explanation of why this is an error] --- RECURRING ISSUES =============== [List patterns of errors that appear multiple times] STYLE GUIDE COMPLIANCE CHECKLIST ============================== ✓ [Rule followed correctly] ✗ [Rule violated - with count of violations] FINAL RECOMMENDATIONS =================== [2-3 actionable suggestions for improving the draft] ``` ## Style Guide Reference The complete Every style guide is included in [EVERY_WRITE_STYLE.md](./references/EVERY_WRITE_STYLE.md). Key areas to focus on: - **Quick Rules**: Title case for headlines, sentence case elsewhere - **Tone**: Active voice, avoid overused words (actually, very, just), be specific - **Numbers**: Spell out one through nine; use numerals for 10+ - **Punctuation**: Oxford commas, em dashes without spaces, proper quotation mark usage - **Capitalization**: Lowercase job titles, company as singular (it), teams as plural (they) - **Emphasis**: Italics only (no bold for emphasis) - **Links**: 2-4 words, don't say "click here" ## Key Principles - **Be specific**: Always quote the exact text with the error - **Reference rules**: Cite the specific style guide rule for each correction - **Maintain voice**: Preserve the author's voice while correcting errors - **Prioritize clarity**: Focus on changes that improve readability - **Be constructive**: Frame feedback to help writers improve - **Flag ambiguous cases**: When style guide doesn't address an issue, explain options and recommend the clearest choice ## Common Areas to Focus On Based on Every's style guide, pay special attention to: - Punctuation (comma usage, semicolons, apostrophes, quotation marks) - Capitalization (proper nouns, titles, sentence starts) - Numbers (when to spell out vs. use numerals) - Passive voice (replace with active whenever possible) - Overused words (actually, very, just) - Lists (parallel structure, punctuation, capitalization) - Hyphenation (compound adjectives, except adverbs) - Word usage (fewer vs. less, they vs. them) - Company references (singular "it", teams as plural "they") - Job title capitalization