| name | docx-template-filling |
| description | Fill DOCX template forms preserving 100% original structure - logos, footers, styles, metadata. Zero-artifact insertion. Output indistinguishable from manual entry. |
DOCX Template Filling - Forensic Preservation
Fill template forms programmatically with zero detectable artifacts. The filled document must be indistinguishable from manual typing in the original template.
When to Use This Skill
Invoke when:
- Filling standardized forms and templates
- Completing application forms
- Responding to questionnaires and surveys
- Processing template-based documents
- Any scenario where the recipient must not detect programmatic manipulation
Critical requirement: Template integrity must be 100% preserved (logos, footers, headers, styles, metadata, element structure).
Core Philosophy: Preservation Over Recreation
WRONG approach: Extract content from template, generate new document
- Loses metadata
- Changes element IDs
- Alters styles subtly
- Creates detectable artifacts
RIGHT approach: Load template, insert content at anchor points using XML API
- Preserves all original elements
- Maintains metadata
- Zero structural changes
- Indistinguishable from manual entry
Critical Anti-Patterns
❌ NEVER: Use pandoc with --reference-doc
# This SEEMS correct but ONLY copies styles, NOT structure
pandoc content.md -o output.docx --reference-doc=template.docx
What happens:
- Template's tables disappear
- Logos, headers, footers lost
- Only style definitions copied
- Looks completely different
Why it fails: --reference-doc means "copy the style definitions," NOT "preserve the document structure"
❌ NEVER: Append content at the end
# This destroys template structure
template = Document('template.docx')
# Remove content after markers
# ... (deletion logic)
# Append all new content at end
for para in new_content:
template.add_paragraph(para.text) # WRONG!
What happens:
- Template questions appear unanswered
- All answers grouped at end
- Structure broken
- Obviously programmatic
❌ NEVER: Recreate tables
# DON'T copy table structure and rebuild
new_table = template.add_table(rows=3, cols=2)
# Even if copying all properties, it's not the original!
What happens:
- Loses original element IDs
- Style inheritance breaks
- Metadata changes
- Detectable as modified
Essential Workflow
Step 1: Inspect Template Structure FIRST
Always inspect before modifying. Never assume structure.
Use the provided inspection script:
python scripts/inspect_template.py template.docx
This prints:
- All tables with identities
- Potential anchor points (paragraphs ending with ":", "Answer:", etc.)
- Headers and footers
- Document element counts
Why critical: Prevents modifying wrong tables, missing anchors, breaking structure.
Step 2: Selective Table Filling
Modify cells in place. Never recreate tables.
from docx import Document
template = Document('template.docx')
# Fill specific cells in existing table
info_table = template.tables[0]
info_table.rows[0].cells[1].text = "Jane Smith"
info_table.rows[1].cells[1].text = "S12345"
# Table structure, styles, borders all preserved
Principle: Modify existing cells. Never remove and recreate.
Step 3: Anchor-Based Content Insertion
Insert content at specific positions using XML API.
# Find anchor paragraphs
anchor_positions = []
for i, para in enumerate(template.paragraphs):
if para.text.strip() == "Answer:":
anchor_positions.append(i)
# Insert content after anchor using XML API
def insert_after(doc, anchor_idx, content_paras):
anchor_elem = doc.paragraphs[anchor_idx]._element
parent = anchor_elem.getparent()
for offset, para in enumerate(content_paras):
parent.insert(
parent.index(anchor_elem) + 1 + offset,
para._element
)
# Load content to insert
content_doc = Document('my_content.docx')
section_paragraphs = content_doc.paragraphs[5:64]
# Insert at anchor
insert_after(template, anchor_positions[0], section_paragraphs)
# Save
template.save('completed.docx')
Why XML API:
doc.add_paragraph()appends at end → wrong positionpara.insert_paragraph_before()has stale reference issues- XML API: direct element manipulation → correct position, zero artifacts
Step 4: Multi-Anchor Insertion (Reverse Order)
When inserting at multiple positions, insert from bottom to top to preserve earlier indices.
# Template has anchors at paragraphs 18, 27, 37
# Insert in REVERSE order
insert_after(template, 37, section3_content) # Last anchor first
insert_after(template, 27, section2_content) # Middle still at 27
insert_after(template, 18, section1_content) # First still at 18
Why reverse: Inserting content shifts later paragraph indices but not earlier ones.
Advanced Patterns
For detailed implementations, see references/patterns.md:
- Content range extraction - Extract multi-section content between markers
- Table identity detection - Identify tables when no IDs exist
- Robust anchor matching - exact/partial/smart modes
- Table repositioning - Move tables without recreating
- Verification - Ensure zero artifacts after filling
Common Scenarios
Scenario 1: Form with Info Table + Q&A
template = Document('form_template.docx')
# Fill info table
info_table = template.tables[0]
info_table.rows[0].cells[1].text = "Applicant Name"
# Find "Answer:" anchors
anchors = [i for i, p in enumerate(template.paragraphs)
if p.text.strip() == "Answer:"]
# Insert responses
responses = Document('my_responses.docx')
response_content = responses.paragraphs[5:30]
insert_after(template, anchors[0], response_content)
template.save('form_completed.docx')
Scenario 2: Report with Table Repositioning
template = Document('report_template.docx')
# Fill team table
team_table = template.tables[0]
team_table.rows[0].cells[1].text = "Team 5"
# Insert section content at anchors
# ... (insertion code)
# Move summary table to correct position
summary_heading_idx = next(i for i, p in enumerate(template.paragraphs)
if "Summary Table:" in p.text)
# Move table from end to after summary heading
# See references/patterns.md for move_table_to_position()
template.save('report_completed.docx')
Bundled Resources
Scripts
scripts/inspect_template.py- Inspect template structure before modification- Usage:
python scripts/inspect_template.py <template.docx> - Prevents destructive mistakes by showing all tables, anchors, headers/footers
- Usage:
References
references/patterns.md- Detailed technical patterns- Content range extraction
- Table identity detection strategies
- XML-level insertion patterns
- Multi-anchor workflows
- Verification procedures
- Complete code examples
Load patterns.md when implementing specific operations beyond basic workflow.
Verification Checklist
Template filling is successful if:
- Filled document indistinguishable from manual entry
- All template tables preserved (count unchanged unless expected)
- Headers/footers unchanged
- Logo(s) intact
- Scoring/grading tables empty (if they should be)
- Styles identical to original
- Content inserted at correct anchor points (not at end)
- Template owner cannot detect programmatic manipulation
Key Lessons
This skill documents patterns where:
- Templates have info tables (to fill) and evaluation/scoring tables (preserve empty)
- Multiple anchor points like "Answer:", "Response:", or "Solution:" for content insertion
- Tables may need repositioning to correct sections
- Document structure must remain intact (headers, footers, logos, branding)
- Zero artifacts requirement (recipient cannot detect automation)
Use cases: Forms, questionnaires, standardized documents, applications, reports.
Core principle: Preservation over recreation. Never rebuild - always modify in place.