| name | poster |
| description | Use when the user needs an academic poster, conference poster, poster-style visual summary, section planning, figure-text balance, or poster packaging workflow. |
Academic Poster Workflow
Create a poster-ready content package without duplicating the full workflows of the other writing skills.
Purpose
This skill is for poster-specific organization:
- define the poster's audience and message
- decide what belongs on the poster and what must be omitted
- convert literature or manuscript content into poster sections
- route figure/layout work to
/draw and /document
Do not treat a poster like a shortened paper. A poster is a visual argument with a small number of high-priority claims.
When To Use
Use this skill when the user wants:
- a conference poster
- a poster-style literature summary
- a visual one-page research overview
- help deciding poster sections, text density, and figure priorities
If the user mainly wants:
- a slide deck: route to
/document
- a long written report: route to
/technical-report
- a paper section: route to
/paper-writing
Workflow
1. Clarify Poster Context
Identify:
- target venue or audience
- poster goal: present a study, summarize a topic, or pitch a direction
- expected size or format if the user knows it
- available materials: workspace papers, manuscript draft, figures, data
2. Choose The Content Source
Use one main upstream workflow:
| Situation | Route |
|---|
| Poster summarizes a research field | /literature-review |
| Poster presents a user's own paper or method | /paper-writing |
| Poster motivates a new topic or open problem | /research-gap |
3. Build A Poster Skeleton
Default sections:
- Title + one-sentence claim
- Background / problem
- Method or comparison frame
- Key evidence or findings
- Main takeaway
- References / contact / QR block if needed
Keep these rules:
- one central claim, not many equal claims
- prefer figures, tables, and short bullets over dense prose
- each section should answer one question only
- remove any paragraph that needs sustained close reading
4. Route Assets And Packaging
- Use
/draw when the poster needs diagrams, cleaned figures, timelines, or concept maps.
- Use
/document when the result should be packaged into a practical file such as PPTX or another layout-friendly deliverable.
- If the user explicitly needs a print-ready poster size, keep the poster structure here, then use
/document to implement the layout.
Output Pattern
Recommended outputs inside workspace/<name>/:
poster-outline.md
poster-copy.md
poster-assets/
- packaged deliverable from
/document
Principles
- Poster first: optimize for scanability, not completeness.
- Visual priority: text exists to support figures and claims.
- Claim discipline: every block must support the poster's main message.
- Honest scope: current first-class packaging is via
/document; do not imply a dedicated poster renderer if none exists.
Example
用户说:"帮我把这个工作区做成一个 conference poster"
→ 用本 skill确定 poster 骨架和主张,再转 /paper-writing 或 /literature-review 生成文案,必要时接 /draw 和 /document