| name | reposter-share |
| description | Create clear, editable project presentations, report posters, technical boards, promotional posters, and visual layouts from DOCX, PDF, PPT, text, or images. Use when Codex needs to extract source content, organize key points, select suitable visuals, build an editable poster or presentation layout in HTML/CSS, PPT, PDF, Figma, or Illustrator, and export a presentation-ready PNG or PDF. Supports BIM reporting as one specialized use case. |
Reposter Share
Create a complete, editable project presentation or poster suitable for review, display, and communication. Prioritize correct content, clear hierarchy, an appropriate visual style, and a dependable production process. Treat BIM reporting as one supported project category rather than the only use case.
Core Rules
- Build the poster with HTML/CSS, PPT, PDF, Figma, Illustrator, or another editable layout tool.
- Keep Chinese text, project facts, captions, dimensions, and labels editable.
- Use CSS, SVG, or vector shapes for frames, title tabs, arrows, icons, borders, and dividers.
- Do not generate the complete poster as one AI image.
- Do not place unverified facts into the poster. Mark missing engineering information as
待补充.
- Do not place raw software interfaces, watermarks, or irrelevant document chrome in the final poster.
- Do not ask an image model to generate Chinese text, dimensions, project names, logos, or labels.
Workflow
1. Read the source
Extract:
- project name
- location
- building area
- function or use
- core topics, application points, or project highlights
- project highlights or results
- available image categories
Preserve verified source facts. Mark missing location, area, or other important engineering data as 待补充.
2. Condense the copy
Convert the source into:
- one main title
- one short value statement
- three to five project facts
- four to six core points or project applications
- one project explanation or key-results module
- three to four image-card titles
Keep the language factual, concise, formal, and easy to scan. Do not invent achievements or exaggerate claims.
Read references/content-mapping.md when mapping long source material into poster modules.
3. Classify and select images
Inspect the source images and classify useful material as:
- project architecture or real scene
- integrated technical or BIM model
- MEP model
- civil or structural model
- local node
- section or cutaway
- clear-height analysis
- point cloud
- optimization comparison
- construction layout
Select one main image and three to four supporting images. Prefer images that directly support the written core points and project narrative.
4. Improve visual material
Clean, crop, or recreate images that are blurry, cluttered, or dominated by software interfaces.
When recreating an image:
- preserve the original project type and technical intent
- preserve important model categories and visible relationships
- avoid obviously incorrect structures or pipe relationships
- use a visual mood appropriate to the project, such as technical, educational, institutional, commercial, cultural, or promotional
- reject fake text, watermarks, UI bars, distorted geometry, and irrelevant objects
Use generated visuals only as independent image panels. Add all text and annotations later in the layout.
Read references/image-rendering.md for general quality principles. Choose generation wording and technical settings according to the available image tool and source material.
5. Build the layout
Use this baseline structure unless the source strongly suggests another:
- Header: organization mark, project title, and short subtitle.
- Main area: one large project or BIM visual.
- Left column: project overview and core points or applications.
- Right panel: project explanation, key results, or optimization summary.
- Bottom strip: three to four result-image cards.
- Footer: short summary or organization information.
Keep module edges aligned, spacing consistent, and the title hierarchy obvious.
6. Apply basic visual design
- Choose a restrained palette suited to the project; blue, white, and pale gray remain a useful technical default.
- Use clear, high-contrast primary title bars.
- Use clean information cards that match the selected visual direction.
- Use technical lines, simple icons, arrows, and borders sparingly.
- Keep repeated cards visually consistent.
- Avoid excessive glow, gradients, decoration, and marketing-style effects.
Read references/style-guide.md for the shared visual baseline.
7. Export and check
Export at the requested final dimensions without enlarging a smaller finished image.
Deliver when practical:
- one editable source file
- one PNG or PDF preview/final output
Check:
- project text matches the verified source
- missing facts are clearly marked
- Chinese text is readable
- images contain no watermarks or software interface bars
- modules are aligned
- title hierarchy is clear
- the main content remains recognizable at thumbnail size
- important text remains editable
Output Scope
This shared workflow targets clean, presentation-ready project reports and posters, including BIM result boards, educational displays, technical presentations, product introductions, cultural communications, and promotional posters. Adapt dimensions, rendering settings, visual-generation prompts, layout ratios, and export methods to the user's tools and source quality.
Do not claim that the workflow guarantees production-grade ultra-high-resolution output, exact replication of a private reference, or identical results across different image-generation and layout environments.
name: reposter-share
description: Create a clear, editable Chinese BIM project report poster from DOCX, PDF, PPT, text, or images. Use when Codex needs to extract project content, organize BIM application points, select suitable visual categories, build a blue-white technical poster in HTML/CSS, PPT, PDF, Figma, or Illustrator, and export a presentation-ready PNG or PDF.
Reposter Share
Create a complete, editable BIM report poster suitable for ordinary presentation and review. Prioritize correct content, clear hierarchy, clean technical styling, and a dependable production process.
Core Rules
- Build the poster with HTML/CSS, PPT, PDF, Figma, Illustrator, or another editable layout tool.
- Keep Chinese text, project facts, captions, dimensions, and labels editable.
- Use CSS, SVG, or vector shapes for frames, title tabs, arrows, icons, borders, and dividers.
- Do not generate the complete poster as one AI image.
- Do not place unverified facts into the poster. Mark missing engineering information as
待补充.
- Do not place raw software interfaces, watermarks, or irrelevant document chrome in the final poster.
- Do not ask an image model to generate Chinese text, dimensions, project names, logos, or labels.
Workflow
1. Read the source
Extract:
- project name
- location
- building area
- function or use
- BIM application points
- project highlights or results
- available image categories
Preserve verified source facts. Mark missing location, area, or other important engineering data as 待补充.
2. Condense the copy
Convert the source into:
- one main title
- one short value statement
- three to five project facts
- four to six BIM application points
- one project explanation or key-results module
- three to four image-card titles
Keep the language factual, concise, formal, and easy to scan. Do not invent achievements or exaggerate claims.
Read references/content-mapping.md when mapping long source material into poster modules.
3. Classify and select images
Inspect the source images and classify useful material as:
- project architecture or real scene
- BIM integrated model
- MEP model
- civil or structural model
- local node
- section or cutaway
- clear-height analysis
- point cloud
- optimization comparison
- construction layout
Select one main image and three to four supporting images. Prefer images that directly support the written BIM application points.
4. Improve visual material
Clean, crop, or recreate images that are blurry, cluttered, or dominated by software interfaces.
When recreating an image:
- preserve the original project type and technical intent
- preserve important model categories and visible relationships
- avoid obviously incorrect structures or pipe relationships
- use a clean blue-white technical presentation mood
- reject fake text, watermarks, UI bars, distorted geometry, and irrelevant objects
Use generated visuals only as independent image panels. Add all text and annotations later in the layout.
Read references/image-rendering.md for general quality principles. Choose generation wording and technical settings according to the available image tool and source material.
5. Build the layout
Use this baseline structure unless the source strongly suggests another:
- Header: organization mark, project title, and short subtitle.
- Main area: one large project or BIM visual.
- Left column: project overview and BIM applications.
- Right panel: project explanation, key results, or optimization summary.
- Bottom strip: three to four result-image cards.
- Footer: short summary or organization information.
Keep module edges aligned, spacing consistent, and the title hierarchy obvious.
6. Apply basic visual design
- Use blue, white, and pale gray as the main palette.
- Use deep blue for primary title bars.
- Use white or pale-blue information cards.
- Use technical lines, simple icons, arrows, and borders sparingly.
- Keep repeated cards visually consistent.
- Avoid excessive glow, gradients, decoration, and marketing-style effects.
Read references/style-guide.md for the shared visual baseline.
7. Export and check
Export at the requested final dimensions without enlarging a smaller finished image.
Deliver when practical:
- one editable source file
- one PNG or PDF preview/final output
Check:
- project text matches the verified source
- missing facts are clearly marked
- Chinese text is readable
- images contain no watermarks or software interface bars
- modules are aligned
- title hierarchy is clear
- the main content remains recognizable at thumbnail size
- important text remains editable
Output Scope
This shared workflow targets clean, presentation-ready BIM posters. Adapt dimensions, rendering settings, visual-generation prompts, layout ratios, and export methods to the user's tools and source quality.
Do not claim that the workflow guarantees production-grade ultra-high-resolution output, exact replication of a private reference, or identical results across different image-generation and layout environments.