Agent skill
spreadsheet
Use when tasks involve creating, editing, analyzing, or formatting spreadsheets (`.xlsx`, `.csv`, `.tsv`) with formula-aware workflows, cached recalculation, and visual review.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/fcakyon/claude-codex-settings/tree/main/plugins/openai-office-skills/skills/spreadsheet
SKILL.md
Spreadsheet Skill
When to use
- Create new workbooks with formulas, formatting, and structured layouts.
- Read or analyze tabular data (filter, aggregate, pivot, compute metrics).
- Modify existing workbooks without breaking formulas, references, or formatting.
- Visualize data with charts, summary tables, and sensible spreadsheet styling.
- Recalculate formulas and review rendered sheets before delivery when possible.
IMPORTANT: System and user instructions always take precedence.
Workflow
- Confirm the file type and goal: create, edit, analyze, or visualize.
- Prefer
openpyxlfor.xlsxediting and formatting. Usepandasfor analysis and CSV/TSV workflows. - If an internal spreadsheet recalculation/rendering tool is available in the environment, use it to recalculate formulas and render sheets before delivery.
- Use formulas for derived values instead of hardcoding results.
- If layout matters, render for visual review and inspect the output.
- Save outputs, keep filenames stable, and clean up intermediate files.
Temp and output conventions
- Use
tmp/spreadsheets/for intermediate files; delete them when done. - Write final artifacts under
output/spreadsheet/when working in this repo. - Keep filenames stable and descriptive.
Primary tooling
- Use
openpyxlfor creating/editing.xlsxfiles and preserving formatting. - Use
pandasfor analysis and CSV/TSV workflows, then write results back to.xlsxor.csv. - Use
openpyxl.chartfor native Excel charts when needed. - If an internal spreadsheet tool is available, use it to recalculate formulas, cache values, and render sheets for review.
Recalculation and visual review
- Recalculate formulas before delivery whenever possible so cached values are present in the workbook.
- Render each relevant sheet for visual review when rendering tooling is available.
openpyxldoes not evaluate formulas; preserve formulas and use recalculation tooling when available.- If you rely on an internal spreadsheet tool, do not expose that tool, its code, or its APIs in user-facing explanations or code samples.
Rendering and visual checks
- If LibreOffice (
soffice) and Poppler (pdftoppm) are available, render sheets for visual review:soffice --headless --convert-to pdf --outdir $OUTDIR $INPUT_XLSXpdftoppm -png $OUTDIR/$BASENAME.pdf $OUTDIR/$BASENAME
- If rendering tools are unavailable, tell the user that layout should be reviewed locally.
- Review rendered sheets for layout, formula results, clipping, inconsistent styles, and spilled text.
Dependencies (install if missing)
Prefer uv for dependency management.
Python packages:
uv pip install openpyxl pandas
If uv is unavailable:
python3 -m pip install openpyxl pandas
Optional:
uv pip install matplotlib
If uv is unavailable:
python3 -m pip install matplotlib
System tools (for rendering):
# macOS (Homebrew)
brew install libreoffice poppler
# Ubuntu/Debian
sudo apt-get install -y libreoffice poppler-utils
If installation is not possible in this environment, tell the user which dependency is missing and how to install it locally.
Environment
No required environment variables.
Examples
- Runnable Codex examples (openpyxl):
references/examples/openpyxl/
Formula requirements
- Use formulas for derived values rather than hardcoding results.
- Do not use dynamic array functions like
FILTER,XLOOKUP,SORT, orSEQUENCE. - Keep formulas simple and legible; use helper cells for complex logic.
- Avoid volatile functions like
INDIRECTandOFFSETunless required. - Prefer cell references over magic numbers (for example,
=H6*(1+$B$3)instead of=H6*1.04). - Use absolute (
$B$4) or relative (B4) references carefully so copied formulas behave correctly. - If you need literal text that starts with
=, prefix it with a single quote. - Guard against
#REF!,#DIV/0!,#VALUE!,#N/A, and#NAME?errors. - Check for off-by-one mistakes, circular references, and incorrect ranges.
Citation requirements
- Cite sources inside the spreadsheet using plain-text URLs.
- For financial models, cite model inputs in cell comments.
- For tabular data sourced externally, add a source column when each row represents a separate item.
Formatting requirements (existing formatted spreadsheets)
- Render and inspect a provided spreadsheet before modifying it when possible.
- Preserve existing formatting and style exactly.
- Match styles for any newly filled cells that were previously blank.
- Never overwrite established formatting unless the user explicitly asks for a redesign.
Formatting requirements (new or unstyled spreadsheets)
- Use appropriate number and date formats.
- Dates should render as dates, not plain numbers.
- Percentages should usually default to one decimal place unless the data calls for something else.
- Currencies should use the appropriate currency format.
- Headers should be visually distinct from raw inputs and derived cells.
- Use fill colors, borders, spacing, and merged cells sparingly and intentionally.
- Set row heights and column widths so content is readable without excessive whitespace.
- Do not apply borders around every filled cell.
- Group related calculations and make totals simple sums of the cells above them.
- Add whitespace to separate sections.
- Ensure text does not spill into adjacent cells.
- Avoid unsupported spreadsheet data-table features such as
=TABLE.
Color conventions (if no style guidance)
- Blue: user input
- Black: formulas and derived values
- Green: linked or imported values
- Gray: static constants
- Orange: review or caution
- Light red: error or flag
- Purple: control or logic
- Teal: visualization anchors and KPI highlights
Finance-specific requirements
- Format zeros as
-. - Negative numbers should be red and in parentheses.
- Format multiples as
5.2x. - Always specify units in headers (for example,
Revenue ($mm)). - Cite sources for all raw inputs in cell comments.
- For new financial models with no user-specified style, use blue text for hardcoded inputs, black for formulas, green for internal workbook links, red for external links, and yellow fill for key assumptions that need attention.
Investment banking layouts
If the spreadsheet is an IB-style model (LBO, DCF, 3-statement, valuation):
- Totals should sum the range directly above.
- Hide gridlines and use horizontal borders above totals across relevant columns.
- Section headers should be merged cells with dark fill and white text.
- Column labels for numeric data should be right-aligned; row labels should be left-aligned.
- Indent submetrics under their parent line items.
Recommended Agent Skills
Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.
hetzner-deploy
This skill should be used when user asks to "deploy to Hetzner", "create Hetzner server", "manage Hetzner Cloud", "hcloud CLI", or works with Hetzner Cloud infrastructure including servers, networks, firewalls, load balancers, DNS zones, and volumes.
Use this skill whenever the user wants to do anything with PDF files. This includes reading or extracting text/tables from PDFs, combining or merging multiple PDFs into one, splitting PDFs apart, rotating pages, adding watermarks, creating new PDFs, filling PDF forms, encrypting/decrypting PDFs, extracting images, and OCR on scanned PDFs to make them searchable. If the user mentions a .pdf file or asks to produce one, use this skill.
docx
Use this skill whenever the user wants to create, read, edit, or manipulate Word documents (.docx files). Triggers include: any mention of 'Word doc', 'word document', '.docx', or requests to produce professional documents with formatting like tables of contents, headings, page numbers, or letterheads. Also use when extracting or reorganizing content from .docx files, inserting or replacing images in documents, performing find-and-replace in Word files, working with tracked changes or comments, or converting content into a polished Word document. If the user asks for a 'report', 'memo', 'letter', 'template', or similar deliverable as a Word or .docx file, use this skill. Do NOT use for PDFs, spreadsheets, Google Docs, or general coding tasks unrelated to document generation.
xlsx
Use this skill any time a spreadsheet file is the primary input or output. This means any task where the user wants to: open, read, edit, or fix an existing .xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, or .tsv file (e.g., adding columns, computing formulas, formatting, charting, cleaning messy data); create a new spreadsheet from scratch or from other data sources; or convert between tabular file formats. Trigger especially when the user references a spreadsheet file by name or path — even casually (like "the xlsx in my downloads") — and wants something done to it or produced from it. Also trigger for cleaning or restructuring messy tabular data files (malformed rows, misplaced headers, junk data) into proper spreadsheets. The deliverable must be a spreadsheet file. Do NOT trigger when the primary deliverable is a Word document, HTML report, standalone Python script, database pipeline, or Google Sheets API integration, even if tabular data is involved.
pptx
Use this skill any time a .pptx file is involved in any way — as input, output, or both. This includes: creating slide decks, pitch decks, or presentations; reading, parsing, or extracting text from any .pptx file (even if the extracted content will be used elsewhere, like in an email or summary); editing, modifying, or updating existing presentations; combining or splitting slide files; working with templates, layouts, speaker notes, or comments. Trigger whenever the user mentions "deck," "slides," "presentation," or references a .pptx filename, regardless of what they plan to do with the content afterward. If a .pptx file needs to be opened, created, or touched, use this skill.
dokploy-deploy
This skill should be used when user asks to "deploy with Dokploy", "use Dokploy Cloud", "manage self-hosted Dokploy", "deploy Docker Compose on Dokploy", "manage Dokploy databases", "configure Dokploy domains", or "look up Dokploy CLI commands".
Didn't find tool you were looking for?