tfriedel

docx

227
40
# Install this skill:
npx skills add tfriedel/claude-office-skills

Or install specific skill: npx add-skill https://github.com/tfriedel/claude-office-skills/tree/main/public/docx

# Description

Comprehensive document creation, editing, and analysis with support for tracked changes, comments, formatting preservation, and text extraction. When Claude needs to work with professional documents (.docx files) for: (1) Creating new documents, (2) Modifying or editing content, (3) Working with tracked changes, (4) Adding comments, or any other document tasks

# SKILL.md


name: docx
description: "Comprehensive document creation, editing, and analysis with support for tracked changes, comments, formatting preservation, and text extraction. When Claude needs to work with professional documents (.docx files) for: (1) Creating new documents, (2) Modifying or editing content, (3) Working with tracked changes, (4) Adding comments, or any other document tasks"


DOCX creation, editing, and analysis

Overview

A user may ask you to create, edit, or analyze the contents of a .docx file. A .docx file is essentially a ZIP archive containing XML files and other resources that you can read or edit. You have different tools and workflows available for different tasks.

Workflow Decision Tree

Reading/Analyzing Content

Use "Text extraction" or "Raw XML access" sections below

Creating New Document

Use "Creating a new Word document" workflow

Editing Existing Document

  • Your own document + simple changes
    Use "Basic OOXML editing" workflow

  • Someone else's document
    Use "Redlining workflow" (recommended default)

  • Legal, academic, business, or government docs
    Use "Redlining workflow" (required)

Reading and analyzing content

Text extraction

If you just need to read the text contents of a document, you should convert the document to markdown using pandoc. Pandoc provides excellent support for preserving document structure and can show tracked changes:

# Convert document to markdown with tracked changes
pandoc --track-changes=all path-to-file.docx -o output.md
# Options: --track-changes=accept/reject/all

Raw XML access

You need raw XML access for: comments, complex formatting, document structure, embedded media, and metadata. For any of these features, you'll need to unpack a document and read its raw XML contents.

Unpacking a file

python ooxml/scripts/unpack.py <office_file> <output_directory>

Key file structures

  • word/document.xml - Main document contents
  • word/comments.xml - Comments referenced in document.xml
  • word/media/ - Embedded images and media files
  • Tracked changes use <w:ins> (insertions) and <w:del> (deletions) tags

Creating a new Word document

When creating a new Word document from scratch, use docx-js, which allows you to create Word documents using JavaScript/TypeScript.

Workflow

  1. MANDATORY - READ ENTIRE FILE: Read docx-js.md (~500 lines) completely from start to finish. NEVER set any range limits when reading this file. Read the full file content for detailed syntax, critical formatting rules, and best practices before proceeding with document creation.
  2. Create a JavaScript/TypeScript file using Document, Paragraph, TextRun components (You can assume all dependencies are installed, but if not, refer to the dependencies section below)
  3. Export as .docx using Packer.toBuffer()

Editing an existing Word document

When editing an existing Word document, use the Document library (a Python library for OOXML manipulation). The library automatically handles infrastructure setup and provides methods for document manipulation. For complex scenarios, you can access the underlying DOM directly through the library.

Workflow

  1. MANDATORY - READ ENTIRE FILE: Read ooxml.md (~600 lines) completely from start to finish. NEVER set any range limits when reading this file. Read the full file content for the Document library API and XML patterns for directly editing document files.
  2. Unpack the document: python ooxml/scripts/unpack.py <office_file> <output_directory>
  3. Create and run a Python script using the Document library (see "Document Library" section in ooxml.md)
  4. Pack the final document: python ooxml/scripts/pack.py <input_directory> <office_file>

The Document library provides both high-level methods for common operations and direct DOM access for complex scenarios.

Redlining workflow for document review

This workflow allows you to plan comprehensive tracked changes using markdown before implementing them in OOXML. CRITICAL: For complete tracked changes, you must implement ALL changes systematically.

Batching Strategy: Group related changes into batches of 3-10 changes. This makes debugging manageable while maintaining efficiency. Test each batch before moving to the next.

Principle: Minimal, Precise Edits
When implementing tracked changes, only mark text that actually changes. Repeating unchanged text makes edits harder to review and appears unprofessional. Break replacements into: [unchanged text] + [deletion] + [insertion] + [unchanged text]. Preserve the original run's RSID for unchanged text by extracting the <w:r> element from the original and reusing it.

Example - Changing "30 days" to "60 days" in a sentence:

# BAD - Replaces entire sentence
'<w:del><w:r><w:delText>The term is 30 days.</w:delText></w:r></w:del><w:ins><w:r><w:t>The term is 60 days.</w:t></w:r></w:ins>'

# GOOD - Only marks what changed, preserves original <w:r> for unchanged text
'<w:r w:rsidR="00AB12CD"><w:t>The term is </w:t></w:r><w:del><w:r><w:delText>30</w:delText></w:r></w:del><w:ins><w:r><w:t>60</w:t></w:r></w:ins><w:r w:rsidR="00AB12CD"><w:t> days.</w:t></w:r>'

Tracked changes workflow

  1. Get markdown representation: Convert document to markdown with tracked changes preserved:
    bash pandoc --track-changes=all path-to-file.docx -o current.md

  2. Identify and group changes: Review the document and identify ALL changes needed, organizing them into logical batches:

Location methods (for finding changes in XML):
- Section/heading numbers (e.g., "Section 3.2", "Article IV")
- Paragraph identifiers if numbered
- Grep patterns with unique surrounding text
- Document structure (e.g., "first paragraph", "signature block")
- DO NOT use markdown line numbers - they don't map to XML structure

Batch organization (group 3-10 related changes per batch):
- By section: "Batch 1: Section 2 amendments", "Batch 2: Section 5 updates"
- By type: "Batch 1: Date corrections", "Batch 2: Party name changes"
- By complexity: Start with simple text replacements, then tackle complex structural changes
- Sequential: "Batch 1: Pages 1-3", "Batch 2: Pages 4-6"

  1. Read documentation and unpack:
  2. MANDATORY - READ ENTIRE FILE: Read ooxml.md (~600 lines) completely from start to finish. NEVER set any range limits when reading this file. Pay special attention to the "Document Library" and "Tracked Change Patterns" sections.
  3. Unpack the document: python ooxml/scripts/unpack.py <file.docx> <dir>
  4. Note the suggested RSID: The unpack script will suggest an RSID to use for your tracked changes. Copy this RSID for use in step 4b.

  5. Implement changes in batches: Group changes logically (by section, by type, or by proximity) and implement them together in a single script. This approach:

  6. Makes debugging easier (smaller batch = easier to isolate errors)
  7. Allows incremental progress
  8. Maintains efficiency (batch size of 3-10 changes works well)

Suggested batch groupings:
- By document section (e.g., "Section 3 changes", "Definitions", "Termination clause")
- By change type (e.g., "Date changes", "Party name updates", "Legal term replacements")
- By proximity (e.g., "Changes on pages 1-3", "Changes in first half of document")

For each batch of related changes:

a. Map text to XML: Grep for text in word/document.xml to verify how text is split across <w:r> elements.

b. Create and run script: Use get_node to find nodes, implement changes, then doc.save(). See "Document Library" section in ooxml.md for patterns.

Note: Always grep word/document.xml immediately before writing a script to get current line numbers and verify text content. Line numbers change after each script run.

  1. Pack the document: After all batches are complete, convert the unpacked directory back to .docx:
    bash python ooxml/scripts/pack.py unpacked reviewed-document.docx

  2. Final verification: Do a comprehensive check of the complete document:

  3. Convert final document to markdown:
    bash pandoc --track-changes=all reviewed-document.docx -o verification.md
  4. Verify ALL changes were applied correctly:
    bash grep "original phrase" verification.md # Should NOT find it grep "replacement phrase" verification.md # Should find it
  5. Check that no unintended changes were introduced

Converting Documents to Images

To visually analyze Word documents, convert them to images using a two-step process:

  1. Convert DOCX to PDF:
    bash soffice --headless --convert-to pdf document.docx

  2. Convert PDF pages to JPEG images:
    bash pdftoppm -jpeg -r 150 document.pdf page
    This creates files like page-1.jpg, page-2.jpg, etc.

Options:
- -r 150: Sets resolution to 150 DPI (adjust for quality/size balance)
- -jpeg: Output JPEG format (use -png for PNG if preferred)
- -f N: First page to convert (e.g., -f 2 starts from page 2)
- -l N: Last page to convert (e.g., -l 5 stops at page 5)
- page: Prefix for output files

Example for specific range:

pdftoppm -jpeg -r 150 -f 2 -l 5 document.pdf page  # Converts only pages 2-5

Code Style Guidelines

IMPORTANT: When generating code for DOCX operations:
- Write concise code
- Avoid verbose variable names and redundant operations
- Avoid unnecessary print statements

Dependencies

Required dependencies (install if not available):

  • pandoc: sudo apt-get install pandoc (for text extraction)
  • docx: npm install -g docx (for creating new documents)
  • LibreOffice: sudo apt-get install libreoffice (for PDF conversion)
  • Poppler: sudo apt-get install poppler-utils (for pdftoppm to convert PDF to images)
  • defusedxml: pip install defusedxml (for secure XML parsing)

# README.md

Office Document Skills for Claude Code

Professional Office document creation and editing workflows for the command line, powered by Claude Code.

What is this?

This repository packages the same Office document manipulation skills used by Claude desktop for use with Claude Code (the CLI version). You get the full power of Claude's document creation capabilities in your terminal, ready to integrate with scripts, CI/CD pipelines, or automated workflows.

Supported Formats

  • PowerPoint (PPTX) - Create presentations from scratch or templates, with HTML-to-PPTX conversion
  • Word (DOCX) - Edit documents with tracked changes, OOXML manipulation, redlining workflows
  • Excel (XLSX) - Build financial models with formulas, formatting, and zero-error validation
  • PDF - Fill forms, merge documents, extract data, convert to images

Key Capabilities

PowerPoint

  • HTML-to-PPTX conversion - Design slides in HTML/CSS, render to PPTX with full formatting
  • Template-based creation - Rearrange slides, replace text with JSON, preserve formatting
  • Visual validation - Generate thumbnail grids to catch text cutoff and layout issues
  • OOXML editing - Direct XML manipulation for precise control

Word

  • Tracked changes (redlining) - Professional document editing with change tracking
  • OOXML manipulation - Add comments, modify structure, preserve formatting
  • Text extraction - Export content with tracked changes preserved

Excel

  • Formula-based models - Working formulas with zero-error requirement
  • Professional formatting - Color-coded inputs/formulas, custom number formats
  • Data validation - Years as text, zeros formatted as "-", proper cell styling

PDF

  • Form filling - Populate fillable PDFs programmatically
  • Document merging - Combine multiple PDFs
  • Format conversion - PPTX to PDF, PDF to images
  • Data extraction - Pull information from PDF forms and documents

Getting Started

Prerequisites

# Python dependencies
venv/bin/pip install -r requirements.txt

# Node.js dependencies (for html2pptx)
npm install

# System tools (usually pre-installed)
# - LibreOffice (soffice)
# - Poppler (pdftoppm)
# - Pandoc

Using with Claude Code

Simply tell Claude Code what you want to create:

> Create a quarterly sales presentation with 5 slides
> Create a powerpoint presentation based on @input/slide_notes.txt
> Edit this Word document and add tracked changes
> Build an Excel financial model for budget projections
> Fill out this PDF form with data from this JSON

Claude Code will:

  1. Check if a skill exists for your task
  2. Read the appropriate SKILL.md workflow
  3. Execute the workflow step-by-step
  4. Save all outputs to outputs/<document-name>/

Manual Usage

All scripts can also be run directly:

# Create PowerPoint thumbnail grid
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/thumbnail.py template.pptx outputs/review/thumbnails

# Rearrange slides
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/rearrange.py template.pptx outputs/deck/final.pptx 0,5,5,12,3

# Extract text inventory
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/inventory.py deck.pptx outputs/deck/inventory.json

# Replace text from JSON
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/replace.py input.pptx outputs/deck/replacements.json outputs/deck/output.pptx

Repository Structure

public/
├── pptx/           # PowerPoint workflows
│   ├── SKILL.md    # Main workflow documentation
│   ├── html2pptx.md # HTML-to-PPTX guide
│   ├── ooxml.md    # OOXML editing guide
│   └── scripts/    # Python/JS utilities
├── docx/           # Word workflows
├── pdf/            # PDF workflows
└── xlsx/           # Excel workflows

outputs/            # Your generated documents (gitignored)
└── <project-name>/ # One directory per document

How It Works

Each format has a SKILL.md file that defines the workflow. Claude Code:

  1. Checks for skills - Before writing custom code, checks if a skill exists
  2. Reads the skill - Loads the complete workflow from SKILL.md
  3. Follows the workflow - Executes each step precisely
  4. Validates outputs - Runs validation scripts (OOXML formats)
  5. Organizes files - All outputs go to outputs/<document-name>/

Example: Creating a Presentation from Template

# 1. Extract template text
venv/bin/python -m markitdown template.pptx

# 2. Generate thumbnails
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/thumbnail.py template.pptx outputs/sales-deck/thumbnails

# 3. Rearrange slides
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/rearrange.py template.pptx outputs/sales-deck/working.pptx 0,15,15,23,8

# 4. Extract text inventory
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/inventory.py outputs/sales-deck/working.pptx outputs/sales-deck/inventory.json

# 5. Generate replacement JSON (with formatting)
# Creates outputs/sales-deck/replacements.json

# 6. Apply replacements
venv/bin/python public/pptx/scripts/replace.py outputs/sales-deck/working.pptx outputs/sales-deck/replacements.json outputs/sales-deck/final.pptx

Claude Code handles all these steps automatically when you ask it to create a presentation.

Why Use This?

Desktop/Web Claude is Great For

  • Interactive document creation
  • Visual feedback during creation

Claude Code is Great For

  • Automation - Generate monthly reports, process batches of documents
  • Custom workflows - Combine with other tools (databases, APIs, scripts)
  • Server environments - Run headless without desktop GUI
  • Template iteration - Rapidly test changes to document templates

Use Cases

  • Automated reporting - Generate weekly/monthly presentations from database data
  • Batch processing - Convert 100 HTML pages to PPTX slides
  • Create sales decks based on product data you pulled from a RAG system
  • Document pipelines - Pull data → populate Excel → generate PDF → email
  • API integration - Webhook triggers document generation
  • learn how to build similar agents for other tasks

Documentation

Output Directory Convention

All generated files go to outputs/<document-name>/:

outputs/
├── quarterly-sales-report/
│   ├── final.pptx
│   ├── thumbnails_grid.png
│   ├── inventory.json
│   └── replacements.json
├── employee-handbook/
│   ├── handbook.docx
│   └── unpacked/
└── budget-2024/
    └── budget.xlsx

This keeps your working directory clean and makes automation easier.

Attribution

Most scripts and workflows in this repository come directly from Claude (Anthropic's AI assistant) and are included here verbatim. If Anthropic wishes for this repository to be taken down, please contact me and I will comply immediately.

Contributing

This is a skills repository. To add capabilities:

  1. Add scripts to public/<format>/scripts/
  2. Document in the appropriate SKILL.md
  3. Update CLAUDE.md with new commands
  4. Ensure validation scripts pass

# Supported AI Coding Agents

This skill is compatible with the SKILL.md standard and works with all major AI coding agents:

Learn more about the SKILL.md standard and how to use these skills with your preferred AI coding agent.