一键导入
de-ai-prose
Use when about to show any prose a human will read - docs, README, commit bodies, UI copy, store text.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
菜单
Use when about to show any prose a human will read - docs, README, commit bodies, UI copy, store text.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
基于 SOC 职业分类
Use when building any mechanic that could fail on a machine out of reach - a shipped product, a CLI a user runs, a server.
Use when doing any work in a project that has the instincts plugin installed
Use when touching build scripts, release or packaging steps, publish flows, or CI config.
Use when about to build something someone proposed, especially when the proposer sounds confident and the idea sounds obviously fine.
Use when adding any cross-cutting change - a new gate, limit, permission check, or rule that must apply everywhere.
Use when about to build or agree to build a feature, test, or check, especially when the request sounds big or clever.
| name | de-ai-prose |
| description | Use when about to show any prose a human will read - docs, README, commit bodies, UI copy, store text. |
Readers can tell when a machine wrote the text, and it costs trust the same way sloppy code does. After you write any prose a person will read, read it back once and cut the tells. Plain words, varied sentences, say the thing instead of announcing you're about to say it.
About to show a human a README, a doc page, a commit or PR body, a changelog entry, a UI string, store copy — anything a person will read as writing rather than run as code.
Plain, varied sentences. Some short. Let one run long and a little uneven, like a person typing.
Say it directly instead of signposting it. Use em-dashes rarely. Prefer periods, commas, "and". Vary connectors. Cutting an em-dash means rebuilding the sentence (a comma, a colon, parentheses, or two sentences), not swapping a different mark into the same joint.
Keep bold for genuinely key terms, not decoration. Drop a table where a sentence reads more naturally.
Read it back and ask: "would a tired engineer writing this actually phrase it this way?" If it sounds like a polished AI explainer, flatten it.
Before (AI voice):
Here's the thing about our caching layer — it's fast, it's simple, and it's reliable. The payoff? Sub-millisecond reads.
After (human):
The cache keeps reads under a millisecond. It's a plain in-memory map with a TTL, nothing clever.
What changed: dropped the signpost, dropped the triad, dropped the rhetorical question, said the concrete thing.
| Thought | Reality |
|---|---|
| "It's just a commit message" | A commit body is prose someone will read. Same pass. |
| "The user asked for polish" | Polish means clear, not machine-shiny. |
| "A table makes this clearer" | Sometimes. A table for everything is a tell. |
This skill must obey its own rule. The read-back pass applies here too. If this file sounds like AI, it has failed on its face.