Blog
/install blog
Blog
A content creation toolkit for drafting, editing, optimizing, scheduling, and managing blog content workflows — all from the command line with timestamped local logging.
Commands
| Command | Description |
|---|---|
blog draft \x3Cinput> |
Log a draft idea or snippet. Without args, shows recent drafts |
blog edit \x3Cinput> |
Record an editing pass or revision note. Without args, shows recent edits |
blog optimize \x3Cinput> |
Log SEO or content optimization notes. Without args, shows recent optimizations |
blog schedule \x3Cinput> |
Record a publication schedule entry. Without args, shows recent schedules |
blog hashtags \x3Cinput> |
Log hashtag sets for social promotion. Without args, shows recent hashtag entries |
blog hooks \x3Cinput> |
Record attention hooks or opening lines. Without args, shows recent hooks |
blog cta \x3Cinput> |
Log call-to-action ideas. Without args, shows recent CTAs |
blog rewrite \x3Cinput> |
Record a rewrite or major revision. Without args, shows recent rewrites |
blog translate \x3Cinput> |
Log a translation task or result. Without args, shows recent translations |
blog tone \x3Cinput> |
Record tone/voice notes for a piece. Without args, shows recent tone entries |
blog headline \x3Cinput> |
Log headline options and A/B test ideas. Without args, shows recent headlines |
blog outline \x3Cinput> |
Record a post outline or structure. Without args, shows recent outlines |
blog stats |
Show summary statistics across all entry types |
blog search \x3Cterm> |
Search across all log entries for a keyword |
blog recent |
Show the 20 most recent activity entries |
blog status |
Health check — version, data dir, entry count, disk usage, last activity |
blog export \x3Cfmt> |
Export all data in json, csv, or txt format |
blog help |
Show all available commands |
blog version |
Print version (v2.0.0) |
Each content command (draft, edit, optimize, etc.) works the same way:
- With arguments: saves the entry with a timestamp to its dedicated
.logfile and records it in activity history - Without arguments: displays the 20 most recent entries from that command's log
Data Storage
All data is stored locally in plain-text log files:
~/.local/share/blog/
├── draft.log # Draft ideas and snippets
├── edit.log # Editing notes and revisions
├── optimize.log # SEO / content optimization records
├── schedule.log # Publication schedule entries
├── hashtags.log # Hashtag sets for social media
├── hooks.log # Attention hooks / opening lines
├── cta.log # Call-to-action ideas
├── rewrite.log # Major revision records
├── translate.log # Translation tasks and results
├── tone.log # Tone / voice notes
├── headline.log # Headline options and A/B ideas
├── outline.log # Post outlines and structures
└── history.log # Unified activity log with timestamps
Each entry is stored as YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM|\x3Cvalue> for easy parsing and export.
Requirements
- Bash 4.0+ (uses
set -euo pipefail) - Standard UNIX utilities:
date,wc,du,grep,head,tail,cat - No external dependencies or API keys required
- Works offline — all data stays on your machine
When to Use
- Blog content pipeline — Track a post from draft → outline → edit → optimize → schedule in one place with timestamps, so you always know where each piece stands
- SEO workflow — Log optimization notes, headline variants, and hashtag sets for each post, then search or export them later for analysis
- Editorial calendar — Use
scheduleto record publication dates andrecentto see upcoming deadlines at a glance - Multi-language content — Track translations with
translate, tone adjustments withtone, and rewrites withrewriteto manage localized content - Social media prep — Build a library of hooks, CTAs, and hashtag sets that you can search and reuse across posts
Examples
Full blog post workflow
# Start with a draft idea
blog draft "10 productivity hacks for remote developers — listicle format"
# Create the outline
blog outline "Intro (hook) → 10 tips with examples → CTA → conclusion"
# Write headline options
blog headline "Option A: 10 Hacks That Actually Work | Option B: Remote Dev Productivity Guide"
# Log editing notes
blog edit "tightened intro paragraph, added code examples to tips 3 and 7"
# Optimize for SEO
blog optimize "target keyword: remote developer productivity, density 1.2%, meta desc added"
# Schedule publication
blog schedule "publish 2024-04-15 09:00 UTC — cross-post to Dev.to and Medium"
Social media preparation
# Create hashtag sets
blog hashtags "#remotework #developer #productivity #coding #devtips"
# Write hooks for social posts
blog hooks "Most devs waste 2 hours daily on context switching. Here's how to fix it."
# Add a CTA
blog cta "Download our free remote work checklist — link in bio"
# Set the tone
blog tone "conversational, slightly informal, use second person (you/your)"
Review and export
# Search for entries about a topic
blog search "productivity"
# View recent activity
blog recent
# Check stats across all categories
blog stats
# Export everything as JSON for backup
blog export json
# Quick health check
blog status
Rewrite and translate
# Log a major rewrite
blog rewrite "complete overhaul of intro section — new angle focusing on data"
# Track a translation
blog translate "EN → ES: productivity article translated, 1800 words, reviewed by Maria"
Output
All commands print confirmation to stdout. Data is persisted in ~/.local/share/blog/. Use blog stats for an overview, blog search \x3Cterm> to find specific entries, or blog export \x3Cfmt> to extract all data as JSON, CSV, or plain text.
Powered by BytesAgain | bytesagain.com | [email protected]
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install blog - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/blog - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Blog?
Manage blog posts with drafts, scheduling, and SEO optimization. Use when creating articles, optimizing metadata, or scheduling publication dates. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 439 downloads so far.
How do I install Blog?
Run "/install blog" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Blog free?
Yes, Blog is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Blog support?
Blog is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Blog?
It is built and maintained by bytesagain3 (@bytesagain3); the current version is v2.0.1.