openclaw 网盘下载
OpenClaw

技能详情(站内镜像,无评论)

首页 > 技能库 > Chen Powerpoint Pptx

使用可靠的布局、模板、占位符、注释、图表和可视化QA创建、检查和编辑Microsoft PowerPoint演示文稿和PPTX幻灯片。使用...

通信与消息

许可证:MIT-0

MIT-0 ·免费使用、修改和重新分发。无需归因。

版本:v1.0.0

统计:⭐ 0 · 32 · 1次当前安装· 1次历史安装

0

安装量(当前) 1

🛡 VirusTotal :良性 · OpenClaw :良性

Package:cs995279497-byte/chen-powerpoint-pptx

安全扫描(ClawHub)

  • VirusTotal :良性
  • OpenClaw :良性

OpenClaw 评估

该技能是仅供指令使用的PowerPoint (.pptx)创作/QA指南,不请求凭据、二进制文件或安装,其运行时指令与其既定目的一致,但小的元数据不匹配需要在安装前进行简短检查。

目的

NAME、DESCRIPTION和SKILL.md专注于创建、检查和编辑.pptx卡组。该技能不声明二进制文件、密钥或安装—所有这些都与仅指令的PowerPoint编辑/QA助手成比例。

说明范围

SKILL.md包含pptx操作的详细工作流程和QA规则;它不指示读取不相关的系统文件、联系外部端点或访问凭据。清单中的截断视图似乎是显示的伪影,而不是恶意指令,但您应该在使用前查看完整的SKILL.md。

安装机制

不包括安装规范和代码文件,因此在安装过程中不会写入磁盘或获取任何内容。这是技能的风险最低的安装配置文件。

证书

该技能不需要环境变量、凭据或配置路径,这适用于仅在您提供的文件上提供指导的仅指令技能。

持久

始终为false (不包括强制) ,并且允许模型调用(默认)。这对于技能来说是正常的;没有修改其他技能或系统范围配置的请求。

综合结论

此技能仅用于指导,在PowerPoint/PPTX工作中看起来很连贯。安装前: (1)打开并阅读完整的SKILL.md ,以确认没有隐藏的步骤或外部端点;清单视图被截断。(2)注意小的元数据不匹配:注册表显示版本1.0.0和ownerId kn78hge5... ,而包含的_meta.json列出版本1.0.1和不同的ownerId —这可以是良性的(重新发布/更新) ,但不是…

安装(复制给龙虾 AI)

将下方整段复制到龙虾中文库对话中,由龙虾按 SKILL.md 完成安装。

请把本段交给龙虾中文库(龙虾 AI)执行:为本机安装 OpenClaw 技能「Chen Powerpoint Pptx」。简介:使用可靠的布局、模板、占位符、注释、图表和可视化QA创建、检查和编辑Microsoft PowerPoint演示文稿和PPTX幻灯片。使用...。
请 fetch 以下地址读取 SKILL.md 并按文档完成安装:https://raw.githubusercontent.com/openclaw/skills/refs/heads/main/skills/cs995279497-byte/chen-powerpoint-pptx/SKILL.md
(来源:yingzhi8.cn 技能库)

SKILL.md

打开原始 SKILL.md(GitHub raw)

---
name: chen-Powerpoint / PPTX
slug: powerpoint-pptx
version: 1.0.1
homepage: https://clawic.com/skills/powerpoint-pptx
description: "Create, inspect, and edit Microsoft PowerPoint presentations and PPTX decks with reliable layouts, templates, placeholders, notes, charts, and visual QA. Use when (1) the task is about PowerPoint or `.pptx`; (2) layouts, placeholders, notes, charts, comments, or template fidelity matter; (3) the deck must render cleanly after edits."
changelog: Rebalanced the skill toward template inventory, layout mapping, and higher-signal QA after a stricter external audit.
metadata: {"clawdbot":{"emoji":"📊","requires":{"bins":[]},"os":["linux","darwin","win32"]}}
---

## When to Use

Use when the main artifact is a Microsoft PowerPoint presentation or `.pptx` deck, especially when layouts, templates, placeholders, notes, comments, charts, extraction, editing, or final visual quality matter.

## Core Rules

### 1. Choose the workflow before touching the deck

- Reading text, editing an existing deck, rebuilding from a template, and creating from scratch are different jobs with different failure modes.
- For text extraction or inspection, read the deck before editing it.
- Text extraction plus thumbnail-style visual inspection is safer than editing from shape assumptions alone.
- For template-driven work, inventory the deck before replacing content.
- For deep edits, remember a `.pptx` file is OOXML with separate parts for slides, layouts, masters, media, notes, and comments.
- If a template exists, template fidelity beats generic slide-design instincts.
- Reusing or duplicating a good existing slide is often safer than rebuilding it and hoping the theme still matches.

### 2. Inventory the deck before replacing content

- Count the reusable layouts, real placeholders, notes, comments, media, and recurring typography or color patterns first.
- Placeholder indexes and layout indexes are not portable assumptions.
- Inspect the actual slide or template before targeting title, body, chart, or image shapes.
- Speaker notes, comments, and linked assets can live outside the visible slide surface.
- A missing or wrong placeholder target can silently land content in the wrong box or wrong layer.
- Master and layout settings can override local slide edits, so the visible problem is not always on the slide you are editing.

### 3. Match content to the actual placeholders

- Count the actual content pieces before choosing a layout.
- Pick layouts based on the real number of ideas, columns, images, or charts the slide needs.
- Do not force two ideas into a three-column slide or cram dense text under a chart.
- Category counts and data series lengths must match or charts will break in ugly ways.
- Explicit sizing beats wishful thinking: text boxes, images, and charts need real space, not "it should fit".
- Do not choose a layout with more placeholders than the content can meaningfully fill.
- Quote layouts are for real quotes, and image-led layouts are for slides that actually have images.
- For chart-, table-, or image-heavy slides, full-slide or two-column layouts are usually safer than stacking dense text above the visual.

### 4. Preserve the deck's visual language

- Theme, master, and layout files usually decide fonts, colors, and hierarchy more than any one slide does.
- Start from the deck's actual theme, fonts, spacing, and aspect ratio instead of improvising a new style.
- Reuse the deck's own alignment and spacing system instead of inventing a second visual language.
- Use common fonts for portability and strong contrast for readability.
- Preserve the template's visual logic first; originality matters less than not breaking the deck's existing language.
- Combining slides from multiple sources requires normalizing themes, masters, and alignment afterward.

### 5. Run content QA and visual QA separately

- Text overflow, bad alignment, clipped shapes, weak contrast, and placeholder leftovers are normal first-pass failures.
- Run both content QA and visual QA; missing text and broken layout are different failure classes.
- Render or inspect the actual deck output before delivery when layout matters.
- Search for leftover template junk, sample labels, and placeholder text before calling the deck finished.
- Check notes, comments, labels, legends, and chart/table semantics separately from the visual pass.
- A deck can pass text extraction and still fail on overlap, clipping, wrong theme inheritance, or broken notes.
- Thumbnail grids and rendered slides usually reveal layout bugs faster than code or text inspection.
- Assume the first render is wrong and do at least one fix-and-verify cycle before calling the deck finished.
- Re-check affected slides after each fix because one spacing change often creates another issue.

### 6. Keep decks portable and review-safe

- Template masters can override direct edits in surprising ways.
- Complex effects may degrade across PowerPoint, LibreOffice, and conversion pipelines, so keep important content robust without them.
- Image sizing, font substitution, and placeholder mismatch are common reasons a deck looks good in code and bad on screen.
- Notes, comments, linked media, and merged decks can stay broken even when the visible slide looks fine.

## Common Traps

- Placeholder text and sample charts often survive template reuse if not explicitly replaced.
- Directly editing one slide can fail if the real issue lives in the master or layout.
- Charts, icons, and text boxes need enough space; near-collisions are usually visible only after rendering.
- Layout indexes vary by template, so built-in assumptions from one deck often break in another.
- A missing placeholder or wrong shape target can silently put content in the wrong place.
- Counting the text ideas after choosing the layout usually leads to empty placeholders, weak hierarchy, or leftover template junk.
- Font substitution can move line breaks and wreck careful spacing.
- Speaker notes, comments, and linked media can stay broken even when the visible slide looks fine.
- A deck can pass text inspection and still fail visually because of overlap, contrast, or edge clipping.
- Editing from one slide alone can miss the real source of truth in the theme, master, or layout definitions.
- Choosing a quote, comparison, or multi-column layout without matching content usually makes the deck look templated rather than intentional.
- Combining or duplicating slides without checking masters and themes can create subtle inconsistency slide by slide.
- Aspect-ratio mismatches like `16:9` versus `4:3` can shift every placement decision even when each slide looks locally reasonable.

## Related Skills
Install with `clawhub install <slug>` if user confirms:
- `documents` — Document workflows that often feed presentation content.
- `design` — Visual direction and layout decisions.
- `brief` — Concise business messaging for slide narratives.

## Feedback

- If useful: `clawhub star powerpoint-pptx`
- Stay updated: `clawhub sync`