| name | format-standardize |
| description | Standardize formatting and apply consistent style to the deliverable. Use after generation to ensure the output matches the user's formatting standards and conventions. |
Format & Standardize Skill
Purpose
Ensures the generated deliverable follows consistent formatting, style, and structure standards. This is the "polish" step that makes work look professional and maintainable.
What to Do
- Review the generated deliverable
- Load their standards to understand formatting preferences
- Apply standardization:
- Code formatting (indentation, naming, structure)
- Documentation formatting (headers, lists, spacing)
- Consistency across all elements
- Professional appearance
- Use their tools/conventions if specified:
- Example: "Use Prettier for code"
- Example: "Use Markdown standard headers"
- Verify complete consistency before delivery
Format Checks by Type
Code Features
- Consistent indentation (spaces/tabs)
- Naming conventions (camelCase, snake_case, etc.)
- Consistent spacing around operators and braces
- Comments formatted consistently
- Imports/exports organized
- Line length consistent
- Semicolons or no-semicolons applied consistently
- Quotes style (single/double) consistent
Documentation
- Consistent header levels (# ## ###)
- Consistent list formatting (bullets vs numbers)
- Code blocks properly formatted
- Links properly formatted
- Consistent spacing between sections
- Table formatting (if applicable)
- Consistent punctuation
Refactoring
- Before code formatted consistently
- After code formatted consistently
- Explanations formatted clearly
- Highlight differences clearly
Test Suite
- Test file organization
- Test function naming consistent
- Assertion formatting consistent
- Setup/teardown indentation
- Comments consistent format
Content Creation
- Section headers consistent
- Example formatting consistent
- List formatting consistent
- Tone/voice consistent throughout
- Line breaks for readability
Process
- Take the generated deliverable
- Load their saved standards using StandardsRepository (look for formatting preferences)
- Apply standardization rules
- Format code/text with appropriate tools:
- Code: ESLint, Prettier, or manual formatting
- Docs: Markdown standards
- Content: Style guide consistency
- Do a final pass for consistency
- Return the formatted output
Loading Standards
Use StandardsRepository to access formatting preferences:
const standards = standardsRepository.getStandards(context.projectType)
if (standards && standards.commonPatterns) {
// Apply their formatting preferences from commonPatterns
standards.commonPatterns.forEach(pattern => {
// Example: "Use 2-space indentation", "Sort imports alphabetically"
applyFormattingPattern(pattern)
})
}
See .claude/lib/standards-repository.md for interface details.
Output Format
# Formatting Applied
## Standards Used
- [First formatting standard]
- [Second formatting standard]
- [Tools/conventions applied]
## Changes Made
- [List of formatting changes applied]
- [Example: "Sorted imports alphabetically"]
- [Example: "Applied 2-space indentation"]
## The Formatted Deliverable
[Complete formatted output, ready to use]
## Validation
- Consistent formatting: ✓
- Professional appearance: ✓
- Ready for review/delivery: ✓
Success Criteria
✓ All formatting is consistent ✓ Follows user's standards ✓ Professional appearance ✓ Ready for code review or publication ✓ No formatting inconsistencies remain
Common Formatting Rules
For Code:
- Use their linter (ESLint, Pylint, etc.)
- Apply their code formatter (Prettier, Black, etc.)
- Follow their naming conventions
- Consistent indentation throughout
For Documentation:
- Consistent markdown formatting
- Proper header hierarchy
- Consistent code block formatting
- Proper link formatting
For Content:
- Consistent section structure
- Consistent list formatting
- Professional tone throughout
- Proper punctuation and capitalization
Example
Input (Before Formatting):
const MyComponent = ( props ) => {
return (
<div>
{ props.title }
</div>
);
};
export default MyComponent
After Formatting (assuming standard React conventions):
const MyComponent = (props) => {
return (
<div>
{props.title}
</div>
);
};
export default MyComponent;
Changes Made:
- Removed spaces in function parameters
- Removed spaces around JSX expression braces
- Added semicolon
- Consistent indentation
Notes
- If user defined formatting preferences in standards, USE THEM
- Professional formatting increases perceived quality significantly
- Consistency matters more than the specific choice (spaces vs tabs - pick one and stick with it)
- This step makes the deliverable look "production-ready"