| name | apple-context |
| description | Use CPSL calendar and location modules for user-approved Apple Calendar events and current device location. |
| metadata | {"short-description":"Calendar and location through CPSL"} |
Apple Context
Use this skill when the user asks about their calendar, schedule, events, availability, travel time, local context, nearby places, weather at their current position, or any request that depends on the device's current location.
Permissions
- Check
help(), then calendar.help() or location.help() before using the modules.
- Calendar and location access states use
granted, denied, and undefined through the state or access fields. If access is undefined, calling the relevant request/current function may prompt the user.
- If access is denied, stop using that capability and tell the user to enable access for Herm in iOS Settings or macOS System Settings. Do not repeatedly retry.
- Use only the minimum needed capability. Do not request calendar or location access unless it materially helps with the user's request.
Calendar
Use calendar.status() before reading or changing events when practical. If a calendar operation reports denied access, explain that Calendar access must be enabled in Settings.
local status = calendar.status()
if status.state == "undefined" then
status = calendar.request_access("full")
end
List events with an explicit time range:
local events = calendar.events("2026-07-08T00:00:00Z", "2026-07-09T00:00:00Z", {limit = 50})
Create events only when the user asked you to add something or clearly approved it:
local event = calendar.create("Dentist", "2026-07-08T16:00:00Z", "2026-07-08T17:00:00Z", {
location = "Main St"
})
Location
Use location.current() for the current device location. It prompts if access is undefined and returns a table containing location.latitude, location.longitude, accuracy, and timestamp.
local here = location.current()
print(here.location.latitude, here.location.longitude)
Treat location as sensitive. Do not print precise coordinates unless the user needs them or asks for them; prefer using the location to answer the task.