AI writing system that mimics human writing style. Supports DeepSeek, 智谱GLM, and MiniMax models. Cost-effective for content generation, style modeling, and publishing workflows. Integrates with Claude Code Skills and Subagents.
git clone https://github.com/dongbeixiaohuo/writing-agent.gitAI writing system that mimics human writing style. Supports DeepSeek, 智谱GLM, and MiniMax models. Cost-effective for content generation, style modeling, and publishing workflows. Integrates with Claude Code Skills and Subagents.
[{"step":"Define your stylistic parameters. Use the prompt template to specify the author or brand (e.g., 'Neil Gaiman,' 'The New Yorker,' 'HubSpot blog'), tone (e.g., 'witty,' 'authoritative,' 'minimalist'), and content type (e.g., 'blog post,' 'press release,' 'LinkedIn newsletter'). Include 2-3 examples of their work for reference.","tip":"For best results, provide 3-5 sample texts from the target style. This helps the AI calibrate tone, vocabulary, and structural quirks. Tools like Claude Code can automate this by scraping and analyzing reference materials."},{"step":"Customize the topic and key points. Clearly outline the core message, subtopics, or arguments you want included. For example, if writing a product description in Apple’s style, specify features, benefits, and emotional hooks (e.g., 'highlight seamless integration with existing devices').","tip":"Use bullet points for key points to avoid ambiguity. If the style prioritizes brevity (e.g., Hemingway), limit the bullet points to 3-5 critical ideas. For verbose styles (e.g., David Foster Wallace), include 7-10 nuanced points."},{"step":"Set length and structural constraints. Specify word count, section headers, or formatting requirements (e.g., 'include a 200-word intro, three 300-word body sections, and a 100-word conclusion'). For social media, include platform-specific guidelines (e.g., 'optimize for Twitter’s 280-character limit').","tip":"Use tools like Grammarly or Hemingway Editor to pre-check readability metrics (e.g., Flesch-Kincaid score) if the style has specific constraints. For example, *The Atlantic* targets a 9th-grade reading level."},{"step":"Generate and refine iteratively. Run the prompt in your preferred model (DeepSeek, 智谱GLM, or MiniMax), then review the output. Use a tool like Claude Code to compare the generated text against your reference samples, adjusting prompts based on discrepancies.","tip":"For high-stakes content (e.g., brand messaging), run 3-5 variations with slight tweaks to tone or structure, then use a voting system (e.g., team feedback in Notion) to select the best version."},{"step":"Integrate into your workflow. For publishing, export the final draft to your CMS (e.g., WordPress, Medium) or use Subagents to automate formatting. For social media, schedule posts directly via tools like Buffer or Hootsuite.","tip":"If using Claude Code Skills, create a reusable script that automates the prompt generation and output formatting. For example, a script could prepend metadata (e.g., author, publish date) to the generated text."}]
No install command available. Check the GitHub repository for manual installation instructions.
git clone https://github.com/dongbeixiaohuo/writing-agentCopy the install command above and run it in your terminal.
Launch Claude Code, Cursor, or your preferred AI coding agent.
Use the prompt template or examples below to test the skill.
Adapt the skill to your specific use case and workflow.
Write a [TYPE_OF_CONTENT] in the style of [AUTHOR_OR_BRAND]. Use a [TONE: formal/casual/conversational] tone. The piece should focus on [TOPIC] and include [SPECIFIC_KEY_POINTS]. Aim for [LENGTH_IN_WORDS] words. Reference [CONTEXT_OR_EXAMPLES] to ensure stylistic consistency. Here’s the prompt to follow: 'Write a [TYPE_OF_CONTENT] in the style of [AUTHOR_OR_BRAND] about [TOPIC] with a [TONE] tone, covering [SPECIFIC_KEY_POINTS]. Make it [LENGTH_IN_WORDS] words long and reference [CONTEXT_OR_EXAMPLES].'
In the style of Malcolm Gladwell, here’s a 500-word essay exploring the psychology behind why some people thrive under pressure while others crumble. The piece opens with a vivid anecdote about a firefighter who made split-second decisions during a blaze in downtown Chicago, then transitions into Gladwell’s signature blend of storytelling and data-driven analysis. The essay examines the concept of 'deliberate practice' from Anders Ericsson’s research, weaving in examples from sports, music, and business to argue that resilience isn’t innate but cultivated through structured challenges. It critiques the myth of the 'natural talent' and instead highlights how marginal gains—like a tennis player’s 10-minute daily focus drills—compound over time. The tone balances intellectual curiosity with conversational accessibility, ending with a call to reframe failure as a feedback loop rather than a verdict. The piece is framed as a standalone chapter from a larger work, complete with subtle references to Gladwell’s other books, such as *Outliers* and *David and Goliath*, to maintain stylistic consistency. Key phrases like 'tipping point,' 'threshold effect,' and '10,000-hour rule' are subtly incorporated to reinforce the Gladwellian voice. The word count is precisely 500, with a word processor’s 'readability score' of 8.2, aligning with Gladwell’s typical prose style.
AI assistant built for thoughtful, nuanced conversation
IronCalc is a spreadsheet engine and ecosystem
ITIL-aligned IT service management platform
Customer feedback management made simple
Enterprise workflow automation and service management platform
Automate your spreadsheet tasks with AI power
Take a free 3-minute scan and get personalized AI skill recommendations.
Take free scan