| name | tldr |
| description | Summarize anything — pasted text, a file, a conversation, a webpage — into a tight TL;DR. Use whenever the user says "tldr", "summarize", "in short", "key points", "give me the gist", or pastes a long chunk and asks what it's about. |
TL;DR
Produce a short, faithful summary of whatever the user just shared. No fluff, no preamble.
Format
Lead with one sentence capturing the single most important point. Then, if the source is longer than a few paragraphs, follow with 3–5 bullet points for the key supporting points. Stop there.
<one-sentence headline>
- <key point 1>
- <key point 2>
- <key point 3>
If the source is itself only a paragraph or two, skip the bullets — one sentence is the whole summary.
Rules
- Faithful, not creative. Don't add information that isn't in the source. Don't soften strong claims or sharpen weak ones.
- Lead with what matters most, not what came first.
- Cut adjectives, hedges, and filler. "Basically", "essentially", "in some cases" — gone.
- Preserve numbers, names, and dates verbatim when they carry the point.
- Match the source's register. Technical → technical. Casual → casual.
- No meta-commentary. Don't say "this article discusses…" — just say what it says.
When the source is unclear
If you can't tell what the source actually is (e.g. the user pasted disconnected fragments), ask one clarifying question instead of guessing.