Writing Clearly And Concisely

softaworks's avatarfrom softaworks
235stars🔀10forks📁View on GitHub🕐Updated Jan 1, 1970

When & Why to Use This Skill

This Claude skill empowers users to write with clarity and force by applying the timeless principles of Strunk's 'The Elements of Style.' It specializes in refining prose for human readers—such as documentation, reports, and UI text—by enforcing active voice, omitting needless words, and systematically removing generic AI writing patterns and 'puffery' to ensure professional, high-impact communication.

Use Cases

  • Technical Documentation: Polishing READMEs and technical explanations to be concise, specific, and easy for developers to follow.
  • Software Development Communication: Drafting clear, professional commit messages and pull request descriptions that improve team coordination.
  • UI/UX Copywriting: Refining error messages, help text, and interface labels to be direct, user-centric, and free of jargon.
  • AI Content De-puffing: Auditing and rewriting AI-generated drafts to remove overused vocabulary like 'delve' or 'leverage' and replace them with concrete, forceful language.
namewriting-clearly-and-concisely
descriptionUse when writing prose humans will read—documentation, commit messages, error messages, explanations, reports, or UI text. Applies Strunk's timeless rules for clearer, stronger, more professional writing.

Writing Clearly and Concisely

Overview

Write with clarity and force. This skill covers what to do (Strunk) and what not to do (AI patterns).

When to Use This Skill

Use this skill whenever you write prose for humans:

  • Documentation, README files, technical explanations
  • Commit messages, pull request descriptions
  • Error messages, UI copy, help text, comments
  • Reports, summaries, or any explanation
  • Editing to improve clarity

If you're writing sentences for a human to read, use this skill.

Limited Context Strategy

When context is tight:

  1. Write your draft using judgment
  2. Dispatch a subagent with your draft and the relevant section file
  3. Have the subagent copyedit and return the revision

Loading a single section (~1,000-4,500 tokens) instead of everything saves significant context.

Elements of Style

William Strunk Jr.'s The Elements of Style (1918) teaches you to write clearly and cut ruthlessly.

Rules

Elementary Rules of Usage (Grammar/Punctuation):

  1. Form possessive singular by adding 's
  2. Use comma after each term in series except last
  3. Enclose parenthetic expressions between commas
  4. Comma before conjunction introducing co-ordinate clause
  5. Don't join independent clauses by comma
  6. Don't break sentences in two
  7. Participial phrase at beginning refers to grammatical subject

Elementary Principles of Composition:

  1. One paragraph per topic
  2. Begin paragraph with topic sentence
  3. Use active voice
  4. Put statements in positive form
  5. Use definite, specific, concrete language
  6. Omit needless words
  7. Avoid succession of loose sentences
  8. Express co-ordinate ideas in similar form
  9. Keep related words together
  10. Keep to one tense in summaries
  11. Place emphatic words at end of sentence

Reference Files

The rules above are summarized from Strunk's original text. For complete explanations with examples:

Section File ~Tokens
Grammar, punctuation, comma rules 02-elementary-rules-of-usage.md 2,500
Paragraph structure, active voice, concision 03-elementary-principles-of-composition.md 4,500
Headings, quotations, formatting 04-a-few-matters-of-form.md 1,000
Word choice, common errors 05-words-and-expressions-commonly-misused.md 4,000

Most tasks need only 03-elementary-principles-of-composition.md — it covers active voice, positive form, concrete language, and omitting needless words.

AI Writing Patterns to Avoid

LLMs regress to statistical means, producing generic, puffy prose. Avoid:

  • Puffery: pivotal, crucial, vital, testament, enduring legacy
  • Empty "-ing" phrases: ensuring reliability, showcasing features, highlighting capabilities
  • Promotional adjectives: groundbreaking, seamless, robust, cutting-edge
  • Overused AI vocabulary: delve, leverage, multifaceted, foster, realm, tapestry
  • Formatting overuse: excessive bullets, emoji decorations, bold on every other word

Be specific, not grandiose. Say what it actually does.

For comprehensive research on why these patterns occur, see signs-of-ai-writing.md. Wikipedia editors developed this guide to detect AI-generated submissions — their patterns are well-documented and field-tested.

Bottom Line

Writing for humans? Load the relevant section from elements-of-style/ and apply the rules. For most tasks, 03-elementary-principles-of-composition.md covers what matters most.