Create stunning, animation-rich HTML presentations from scratch or by converting PowerPoint files. Use when the user wants to build a presentation, convert a PPT/PPTX to web, or create slides for a talk/pitch. Helps non-designers discover their aesthetic through visual exploration rather than abstract choices.
Use this skill any time a spreadsheet file is the primary input or output. This means any task where the user wants to: open, read, edit, or fix an existing .xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, or .tsv file (e.g., adding columns, computing formulas, formatting, charting, cleaning messy data); create a new spreadsheet from scratch or from other data sources; or convert between tabular file formats. Trigger especially when the user references a spreadsheet file by name or path — even casually (like "the xlsx in my downloads") — and wants something done to it or produced from it. Also trigger for cleaning or restructuring messy tabular data files (malformed rows, misplaced headers, junk data) into proper spreadsheets. The deliverable must be a spreadsheet file. Do NOT trigger when the primary deliverable is a Word document, HTML report, standalone Python script, database pipeline, or Google Sheets API integration, even if tabular data is involved.
Handle slide decks and PowerPoint files cautiously; avoid binary reads, prefer companion PDFs or outlines for analysis, and be explicit about PPTX parsing limits.
Plan, review, and then assemble a stakeholder-ready dashboard package from the current analysis run, with a native interactive canvas experience.
Data analysis skill hub. Routes to the right specialist subskill depending on the request — exploration, query writing, end-to-end analysis, visualization, validation, dashboard planning plus assembly, or recurring snapshot refresh.
Handle spreadsheets and tabular files safely; use text reads only for text tables and avoid treating Excel or Parquet binaries as UTF-8 files.
Produce a sourced research report in the user's language using a structured, evidence-first workflow. Supports quick, standard, deep, and exhaustive research modes. Prioritizes evidence quality, entity disambiguation, claim verification, contradiction checking, uncertainty handling, and clear synthesis before final writing.
Work with Microsoft Word DOCX files safely. Use when the user asks to inspect, compare, revise, polish, generate, or prepare Word documents, especially SOWs and proposals that need consistent DOCX-ready structure.