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Word Docx 1

by @tonydesign1999

Create, inspect, and edit Microsoft Word documents and DOCX files with reliable styles, numbering, tracked changes, tables, sections, and compatibility check...

Versionv1.0.0
Downloads1,645
Installs13
TERMINAL
clawhub install word-docx-1

πŸ“– About This Skill


name: Word / DOCX slug: word-docx version: 1.0.2 homepage: https://clawic.com/skills/word-docx description: "Create, inspect, and edit Microsoft Word documents and DOCX files with reliable styles, numbering, tracked changes, tables, sections, and compatibility checks. Use when (1) the task is about Word or .docx; (2) the file includes tracked changes, comments, fields, tables, templates, or page layout constraints; (3) the document must survive round-trip editing without formatting drift." changelog: Tightened the skill around fragile review workflows, reference stability, and layout drift after a stricter external audit. metadata: {"clawdbot":{"emoji":"πŸ“˜","os":["linux","darwin","win32"]}}

When to Use

Use when the main artifact is a Microsoft Word document or .docx file, especially when tracked changes, comments, headers, numbering, fields, tables, templates, or compatibility matter.

Core Rules

1. Treat DOCX as OOXML, not plain text

  • A .docx file is a ZIP of XML parts, so structure matters as much as visible text.
  • The critical parts are usually word/document.xml, styles.xml, numbering.xml, headers, footers, and relationship files.
  • Text may be split across multiple runs; never assume one word or sentence lives in one XML node.
  • Use different workflows on purpose: structured extraction for quick reading, style-driven generation for new files, and OOXML-aware editing for fragile existing documents.
  • If the job is mainly reading, extracting, or reviewing, prefer a structure-preserving read path before touching OOXML.
  • For deep edits, inspect the package layout instead of relying only on rendered output.
  • Reading, generating, and preserving an existing reviewed document are different jobs even when the format is the same.
  • Legacy .doc inputs usually need conversion before you can trust modern .docx assumptions.
  • 2. Preserve styles and direct formatting deliberately

  • Prefer named styles over direct formatting so the document stays editable.
  • Styles layer: paragraph styles, character styles, and direct formatting do not behave the same.
  • Removing direct formatting is often safer than stacking more inline formatting on top.
  • When editing an existing file, extend the current style system instead of inventing a parallel one.
  • Copying content between documents can silently import foreign styles, theme settings, and numbering definitions.
  • 3. Lists and numbering are their own system

  • Bullets and numbering belong to Word's numbering definitions, not pasted Unicode characters.
  • abstractNum, num, and paragraph numbering properties all matter, so restart behavior is rarely "visual only".
  • Indentation and numbering are related but not identical; a list can have broken numbering even if the indent looks right.
  • A list that looks correct in one editor can restart, flatten, or renumber itself later if the underlying numbering state is wrong.
  • 4. Page layout lives in sections

  • Margins, orientation, headers, footers, and page numbering are section-level behavior.
  • First-page and odd/even headers can differ inside the same document, so one header fix may not fix the document.
  • Set page size explicitly because A4 and US Letter defaults change pagination and table widths.
  • Use section breaks for layout changes; manual spacing and stray page breaks usually create drift.
  • Header and footer media use part-specific relationships, so copied IDs often break images or links.
  • Tables, page breaks, and headers often drift together, so treat layout fixes as document-wide, not local cosmetic edits.
  • Table geometry depends on page width, margins, and fixed widths, so "close enough" table edits often break later in Google Docs or LibreOffice.
  • 5. Track changes, comments, and fields need precise edits

  • Visible text is not the full document when tracked changes are enabled.
  • Insertions, deletions, and comments carry metadata that can survive careless edits.
  • Deleted text may still exist in the XML even when it no longer appears on screen.
  • Comment anchors and review ranges can break if edits move text without preserving the surrounding structure.
  • Comment markers and review wrappers do not behave like inline formatting, so moving text carelessly can orphan or misplace them.
  • Comments, footnotes, bookmarks, and linked media may live in separate parts, not only in the main document body.
  • Tables of contents, page numbers, dates, cross-references, and mail merge placeholders are fields.
  • Edit the field source carefully and expect cached display values to lag until refresh.
  • Hyperlinks, bookmarks, and references can break if IDs or relationships stop matching.
  • Bookmarks, footnotes, comment ranges, and cross-references depend on stable anchors even when the visible text seems untouched.
  • A document can look correct while still containing stale field output that refreshes later into something different.
  • For review workflows, make minimal replacements instead of rewriting whole paragraphs.
  • In tracked-change workflows, only the changed span should look changed; broad rewrites create noisy reviews and can destroy the original formatting context.
  • For legal, academic, or business review documents, default to review-style edits over wholesale paragraph rewrites unless the user explicitly wants a rewrite.
  • 6. Verify round-trip compatibility before delivery

  • Complex documents can shift between Word, LibreOffice, Google Docs, and conversion tools.
  • Tables, headers, embedded fonts, and copied styles are common sources of layout drift.
  • Treat .docm as macro-bearing and higher risk; treat .doc as legacy input that may need conversion first.
  • When layout matters, explicit table widths are safer than auto-fit or percentage-style behavior that different editors reinterpret.
  • A document that passes a text check can still fail on pagination, table widths, or reference refresh after the recipient opens it.
  • Common Traps

  • Copy-paste can import unwanted styles and numbering definitions.
  • Header or footer images use part-specific relationships, so reusing IDs blindly breaks them.
  • Empty paragraphs used as spacing make templates fragile; spacing belongs in paragraph settings.
  • A clean-looking export can still hide unresolved revisions, comments, or stale field values.
  • Restarting lists "by eye" usually fails because numbering state lives outside the paragraph text.
  • One visible phrase can be split across several runs, bookmarks, revision tags, or field boundaries.
  • Replacing a whole paragraph to change one clause often breaks review quality, bookmarks, comments, or nearby inline formatting.
  • Deleting all visible text from a paragraph or list item can still leave behind an empty paragraph mark, empty bullet, or unstable numbering.
  • Table auto-fit and percentage-like width behavior can look acceptable in Word and still drift in Google Docs or LibreOffice.
  • LibreOffice and Google Docs can shift complex tables, section behavior, and embedded fonts even when Word looks perfect.
  • Compatibility mode can silently cap newer features or change pagination behavior.
  • A single change in page size or margin defaults can ripple through tables, headers, TOC, and cross-references.
  • A revision workflow can look accepted on screen while leftover metadata, comments, or field caches still make the file unstable later.
  • TOC entries, footnotes, and cross-references can look correct until the recipient updates fields and exposes broken anchors.
  • Related Skills

    Install with clawhub install if user confirms:
  • documents β€” General document handling and format conversion.
  • brief β€” Concise business writing and structured summaries.
  • article β€” Long-form drafting and editorial structure.
  • Feedback

  • If useful: clawhub star word-docx
  • Stay updated: clawhub sync
  • ⚑ When to Use

    Use when the main artifact is a Microsoft Word document or .docx file, especially when tracked changes, comments, headers, numbering, fields, tables, templates, or compatibility matter.