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SKILL.md
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name: Excel / XLSX
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slug: excel-xlsx
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version: 1.0.2
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homepage: https://clawic.com/skills/excel-xlsx
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description: "创建、检查和编辑Microsoft Excel工作簿。"
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changelog: Tightened formula anchoring, recalculation, and model traceability after a stricter external spreadsheet audit.
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metadata: {"clawdbot":{"emoji":"📗","requires":{"bins":[]},"os":["linux","darwin","win32"]}}
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---
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## When to Use
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Use when the main artifact is a Microsoft Excel workbook or spreadsheet file, especially when formulas, dates, formatting, merged cells, workbook structure, or cross-platform behavior matter.
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## Core Rules
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### 1. Choose the workflow by job, not by habit
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- Use `pandas` for analysis, reshaping, and CSV-like tasks.
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- Use `openpyxl` when formulas, styles, sheets, comments, merged cells, or workbook preservation matter.
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- Treat CSV as plain data exchange, not as an Excel feature-complete format.
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- Reading values, preserving a live workbook, and building a model from scratch are different spreadsheet jobs.
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### 2. Dates are serial numbers with legacy quirks
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- Excel stores dates as serial numbers, not real date objects.
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- The 1900 date system includes the false leap-day bug, and some workbooks use the 1904 system.
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- Time is fractional day data, so formatting and conversion both matter.
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- Date correctness is not enough if the number format still displays the wrong thing to the user.
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### 3. Keep calculations in Excel when the workbook should stay live
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- Write formulas into cells instead of hardcoding derived results from Python.
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- Use references to assumption cells instead of magic numbers inside formulas.
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- Cached formula values can be stale, so do not trust them blindly after edits.
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- Check copied formulas for wrong ranges, wrong sheets, and silent off-by-one drift before delivery.
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- Absolute and relative references are part of the logic, so copied formulas can be wrong even when they still "work".
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- Test new formulas on a few representative cells before filling them across a whole block.
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- Verify denominators, named ranges, and precedent cells before shipping formulas that depend on them.
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- A workbook should ship with zero formula errors, not with known `#REF!`, `#DIV/0!`, `#VALUE!`, `#NAME?`, or circular-reference fallout left for the user to fix.
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- For model-style work, document non-obvious hardcodes, assumptions, or source inputs in comments or nearby notes.
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### 4. Protect data types before Excel mangles them
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- Long identifiers, phone numbers, ZIP codes, and leading-zero values should usually be stored as text.
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- Excel silently truncates numeric precision past 15 digits.
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- Mixed text-number columns need explicit handling on read and on write.
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- Scientific notation, auto-parsed dates, and stripped leading zeros are common corruption, not cosmetic issues.
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### 5. Preserve workbook structure before changing content
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- Existing templates override generic styling advice.
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- Only the top-left cell of a merged range stores the value.
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- Hidden rows, hidden columns, named ranges, and external references can still affect formulas and outputs.
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- Shared strings, defined names, and sheet-level conventions can matter even when the visible cells look simple.
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- Match styles for newly filled cells instead of quietly introducing a new visual system.
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- If the workbook is a template, preserve sheet order, widths, freezes, filters, print settings, validations, and visual conventions unless the task explicitly changes them.
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- Conditional formatting, filters, print areas, and data validation often carry business meaning even when users only mention the numbers.
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- If there is no existing style guide and the file is a model, keep editable inputs visually distinguishable from formulas, but never override an established template to force a generic house style.
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### 6. Recalculate and review before delivery
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- Formula strings alone are not enough if the recipient needs current values.
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- `openpyxl` preserves formulas but does not calculate them.
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- Verify no `#REF!`, `#DIV/0!`, `#VALUE!`, `#NAME?`, or circular-reference fallout remains.
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- If layout matters, render or visually review the workbook before calling it finished.
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- Be careful with read modes: opening a workbook for values only and then saving can flatten formulas into static values.
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- If assumptions or hardcoded overrides must stay, make them obvious enough that the next editor can audit the workbook.
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### 7. Scale the workflow to the file size
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- Large workbooks can fail for boring reasons: memory spikes, padded empty rows, and slow full-sheet reads.
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- Use streaming or chunked reads when the file is big enough that loading everything at once becomes fragile.
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- Large-file workflows also need narrower reads, explicit dtypes, and sheet targeting to avoid accidental damage.
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## Common Traps
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- Type inference on read can leave numbers as text or convert IDs into damaged numeric values.
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- Column indexing varies across tools, so off-by-one mistakes are common in generated formulas.
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- Newlines in cells need wrapping to display correctly.
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- External references break easily when source files move.
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- Password protection in old Excel workflows is not serious security.
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- `.xlsm` can contain macros, and `.xls` remains a tighter legacy format.
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- Large files may need streaming reads or more careful memory handling.
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- Google Sheets and LibreOffice can reinterpret dates, formulas, or styling differently from Excel.
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- Dynamic array or newer Excel functions like `FILTER`, `XLOOKUP`, `SORT`, or `SEQUENCE` may fail or degrade in older viewers.
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- A workbook can look fine while still carrying stale cached values from a prior recalculation.
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- Saving the wrong workbook view can replace formulas with cached values and quietly destroy a live model.
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- Copying formulas without checking relative references can push one bad range across an entire block.
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- Hidden sheets, named ranges, validations, and merged areas often keep business logic that is invisible in a quick skim.
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- A workbook can appear numerically correct while still failing because filters, conditional formats, print settings, or data validation were stripped.
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- A workbook can be numerically correct and still fail visually because wrapped text, clipped labels, or narrow columns were never reviewed.
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## Related Skills
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Install with `clawhub install <slug>` if user confirms:
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- `csv` — Plain-text tabular import and export workflows.
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- `data` — General data handling patterns before spreadsheet output.
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- `data-analysis` — Higher-level analysis that can feed workbook deliverables.
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## Feedback
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- If useful: `clawhub star excel-xlsx`
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- Stay updated: `clawhub sync`
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6
_meta.json
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_meta.json
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{
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"ownerId": "kn73vp5rarc3b14rc7wjcw8f8580t5d1",
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"slug": "excel-xlsx",
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"version": "1.0.2",
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"publishedAt": 1773243166499
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}
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