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tonydesign1999

Excel Xlsx 1

by tonydesign1999 · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
linuxdarwinwin32 ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install excel-xlsx-1
Description
Create, inspect, and edit Microsoft Excel workbooks and XLSX files with reliable formulas, dates, types, formatting, recalculation, and template preservation...
README (SKILL.md)

When to Use

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.

Core Rules

1. Choose the workflow by job, not by habit

  • Use pandas for analysis, reshaping, and CSV-like tasks.
  • Use openpyxl when formulas, styles, sheets, comments, merged cells, or workbook preservation matter.
  • Treat CSV as plain data exchange, not as an Excel feature-complete format.
  • Reading values, preserving a live workbook, and building a model from scratch are different spreadsheet jobs.

2. Dates are serial numbers with legacy quirks

  • Excel stores dates as serial numbers, not real date objects.
  • The 1900 date system includes the false leap-day bug, and some workbooks use the 1904 system.
  • Time is fractional day data, so formatting and conversion both matter.
  • Date correctness is not enough if the number format still displays the wrong thing to the user.

3. Keep calculations in Excel when the workbook should stay live

  • Write formulas into cells instead of hardcoding derived results from Python.
  • Use references to assumption cells instead of magic numbers inside formulas.
  • Cached formula values can be stale, so do not trust them blindly after edits.
  • Check copied formulas for wrong ranges, wrong sheets, and silent off-by-one drift before delivery.
  • Absolute and relative references are part of the logic, so copied formulas can be wrong even when they still "work".
  • Test new formulas on a few representative cells before filling them across a whole block.
  • Verify denominators, named ranges, and precedent cells before shipping formulas that depend on them.
  • 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.
  • For model-style work, document non-obvious hardcodes, assumptions, or source inputs in comments or nearby notes.

4. Protect data types before Excel mangles them

  • Long identifiers, phone numbers, ZIP codes, and leading-zero values should usually be stored as text.
  • Excel silently truncates numeric precision past 15 digits.
  • Mixed text-number columns need explicit handling on read and on write.
  • Scientific notation, auto-parsed dates, and stripped leading zeros are common corruption, not cosmetic issues.

5. Preserve workbook structure before changing content

  • Existing templates override generic styling advice.
  • Only the top-left cell of a merged range stores the value.
  • Hidden rows, hidden columns, named ranges, and external references can still affect formulas and outputs.
  • Shared strings, defined names, and sheet-level conventions can matter even when the visible cells look simple.
  • Match styles for newly filled cells instead of quietly introducing a new visual system.
  • If the workbook is a template, preserve sheet order, widths, freezes, filters, print settings, validations, and visual conventions unless the task explicitly changes them.
  • Conditional formatting, filters, print areas, and data validation often carry business meaning even when users only mention the numbers.
  • 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.

6. Recalculate and review before delivery

  • Formula strings alone are not enough if the recipient needs current values.
  • openpyxl preserves formulas but does not calculate them.
  • Verify no #REF!, #DIV/0!, #VALUE!, #NAME?, or circular-reference fallout remains.
  • If layout matters, render or visually review the workbook before calling it finished.
  • Be careful with read modes: opening a workbook for values only and then saving can flatten formulas into static values.
  • If assumptions or hardcoded overrides must stay, make them obvious enough that the next editor can audit the workbook.

7. Scale the workflow to the file size

  • Large workbooks can fail for boring reasons: memory spikes, padded empty rows, and slow full-sheet reads.
  • Use streaming or chunked reads when the file is big enough that loading everything at once becomes fragile.
  • Large-file workflows also need narrower reads, explicit dtypes, and sheet targeting to avoid accidental damage.

Common Traps

  • Type inference on read can leave numbers as text or convert IDs into damaged numeric values.
  • Column indexing varies across tools, so off-by-one mistakes are common in generated formulas.
  • Newlines in cells need wrapping to display correctly.
  • External references break easily when source files move.
  • Password protection in old Excel workflows is not serious security.
  • .xlsm can contain macros, and .xls remains a tighter legacy format.
  • Large files may need streaming reads or more careful memory handling.
  • Google Sheets and LibreOffice can reinterpret dates, formulas, or styling differently from Excel.
  • Dynamic array or newer Excel functions like FILTER, XLOOKUP, SORT, or SEQUENCE may fail or degrade in older viewers.
  • A workbook can look fine while still carrying stale cached values from a prior recalculation.
  • Saving the wrong workbook view can replace formulas with cached values and quietly destroy a live model.
  • Copying formulas without checking relative references can push one bad range across an entire block.
  • Hidden sheets, named ranges, validations, and merged areas often keep business logic that is invisible in a quick skim.
  • A workbook can appear numerically correct while still failing because filters, conditional formats, print settings, or data validation were stripped.
  • A workbook can be numerically correct and still fail visually because wrapped text, clipped labels, or narrow columns were never reviewed.

Related Skills

Install with clawhub install \x3Cslug> if user confirms:

  • csv — Plain-text tabular import and export workflows.
  • data — General data handling patterns before spreadsheet output.
  • data-analysis — Higher-level analysis that can feed workbook deliverables.

Feedback

  • If useful: clawhub star excel-xlsx
  • Stay updated: clawhub sync
Usage Guidance
This skill is an instruction-only policy for working with Excel files and appears internally consistent. Before installing, confirm the agent environment has the tooling you expect (e.g., pandas/openpyxl) if you want automated edits, and be cautious about giving the agent access to sensitive spreadsheets — macro-enabled files (.xlsm) can contain executable code and should be handled separately. Because there is no code to review, static scanners had nothing to analyze; if you plan to let the agent open or modify real files, test the workflow on non-sensitive examples first.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: excel-xlsx-1 Version: 1.0.1 The skill bundle contains purely instructional content for an AI agent regarding the management and manipulation of Excel files. The SKILL.md file provides best practices for using libraries like pandas and openpyxl, focusing on data integrity, formula preservation, and formatting, with no evidence of malicious instructions, data exfiltration, or unauthorized execution.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The skill's name and description match the SKILL.md instructions: guidance about editing, preserving, and validating Excel workbooks. It does not request unrelated binaries, credentials, or config paths.
Instruction Scope
The SKILL.md is narrowly focused on spreadsheet handling (formats, formulas, dates, preservation). It advises using Python libraries like pandas and openpyxl, but because this is an instruction-only skill there is no install/dependency declaration — this is acceptable but worth noting: the runtime environment must provide the referenced tools or the agent should fall back to other safe behaviors.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no bundled code are present, so nothing is written to disk or fetched at install time. This is the lowest-risk install profile for a skill.
Credentials
The skill requests no environment variables, credentials, or config paths. That is proportionate for a guidance-only Excel/XLSX skill.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill is not always-enabled and uses default autonomous-invocation behavior. It does not request persistent privileges or modify other skills/config; nothing in the package suggests elevated persistence.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install excel-xlsx-1
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /excel-xlsx-1
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
No user-facing changes in this release; metadata/file version updated only.
v1.0.0
- Improved formula anchoring, recalculation, and model traceability based on findings from a stricter external spreadsheet audit. - Updated description and guidance for handling formulas, formatting, dates, and workbook preservation. - Expanded documentation on common workflow traps and best practices. - Added related skills and usage instructions. - Clarified when to use this skill versus alternatives like pandas or CSV workflows.
Metadata
Slug excel-xlsx-1
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 5
Active Installs 5
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Excel Xlsx 1?

Create, inspect, and edit Microsoft Excel workbooks and XLSX files with reliable formulas, dates, types, formatting, recalculation, and template preservation... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 760 downloads so far.

How do I install Excel Xlsx 1?

Run "/install excel-xlsx-1" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Excel Xlsx 1 free?

Yes, Excel Xlsx 1 is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Excel Xlsx 1 support?

Excel Xlsx 1 is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (linux, darwin, win32).

Who created Excel Xlsx 1?

It is built and maintained by tonydesign1999 (@tonydesign1999); the current version is v1.0.1.

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