← Back to Skills Marketplace
wangjipeng977

Text To Sql

by 王继鹏 · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
49
Downloads
0
Stars
0
Active Installs
1
Versions
Install in OpenClaw
/install text-to-sql-jipeng
Description
Use when (1) user describes what data they want in plain English and asks for the corresponding SQL query. (2) user says "write SQL for this", "convert to qu...
README (SKILL.md)

Text to SQL

Use when (1) user describes what data they want in plain English and asks for the corresponding SQL query. (2) user says "write SQL for this", "convert to query", "how do I select", or "give me the SQL". (3) user provides a database schema or table descriptions and asks a question answerable by SQL.

Core Position

This skill solves the specific problem of: non-technical users who know what data they want cannot translate their intent into SQL — they need a bridge from natural language to query.

This skill IS NOT:

  • A SQL execution environment — it writes queries, does not run them
  • A schema design tool — it works with existing schema the user provides
  • A data analysis tool — it produces SQL, not results or insights

This skill IS activated ONLY when: natural language description + database schema + SQL request are all present.

Modes

/text-to-sql

Default mode. Converts natural language into a syntactically correct SQL query.

When to use: User describes data needs and provides schema — wants the query.

/text-to-sql/explain

Outputs the SQL query with inline comments explaining each clause.

When to use: User wants to understand the query while seeing it, for learning purposes.

/text-to-sql/alternatives

Provides 2-3 alternative query approaches (different JOINs, subqueries vs CTEs, etc.).

When to use: User is learning SQL or wants to compare query strategies.

Execution Steps

Step 1 — Confirm Schema

  1. Receive natural language request and detect if schema is present
  2. Schema may be provided as:
    • Table/column names explicitly in the request
    • A CREATE TABLE statement
    • A DESCRIBE output
    • Column names from a previous query
  3. If schema is NOT provided, ask the user for it before proceeding — do not guess table or column names
  4. Build a schema map: table_name → {column: type}

Step 2 — Translate Intent to SQL Clauses

Map natural language intent to SQL components:

Natural Language SQL Clause
"all", "every", "complete list" SELECT * or SELECT all columns
"only", "just", "specifically" SELECT [specific columns]
"where [condition]" WHERE clause
"sorted by", "in order of" ORDER BY
"grouped by", "each [X]" GROUP BY
"top N", "first N", "N most" LIMIT N + ORDER BY
"not", "exclude", "without" WHERE NOT or != / \x3C>
"both X and Y", "along with" AND in WHERE, or JOIN
"either X or Y", "or" OR in WHERE
"between X and Y" BETWEEN
"like", "containing", "includes" LIKE '%value%'
"before", "after", "earlier than" WHERE date_column \x3C 'date'
"latest", "most recent", "newest" ORDER BY date DESC LIMIT 1
"count of", "how many" COUNT(*) aggregate
"total of", "sum of" SUM(column)
"average of" AVG(column)

Step 3 — Handle Joins and Relationships

If the request involves multiple tables:

  1. Identify which tables contain the needed columns
  2. Determine the join key (foreign key relationship)
  3. Select join type: INNER JOIN (default), LEFT JOIN (if some side may be empty), RIGHT JOIN (rare)
  4. Write join on the correct key pair

If schema doesn't include relationship info, ask user to clarify which column links the tables.

Step 4 — Generate and Validate

SELECT
  o.order_id,
  o.created_at,
  c.customer_name,
  SUM(o.total_amount) AS total_revenue
FROM orders o
INNER JOIN customers c ON o.customer_id = c.id
WHERE o.created_at >= '2024-01-01'
GROUP BY o.order_id, o.created_at, c.customer_name
ORDER BY total_revenue DESC
LIMIT 10;

Check:

  • All columns referenced exist in the schema
  • All table aliases are defined
  • JOIN conditions are valid (same type, correct keys)
  • No ambiguous column references (all tables have aliases)
  • Aggregate queries have appropriate GROUP BY

Mandatory Rules

Do not

  • Do not invent table names or column names not in the provided schema
  • Do not use SQL keywords as column names without backtick quoting where needed
  • Do not write SELECT * in production queries — list specific columns
  • Do not assume which table a column belongs to — qualify all column references

Do

  • Ask for schema information before writing the query if it wasn't provided
  • Qualify all column references with table aliases (e.g., o.order_id)
  • Use backtick or quoted identifiers if column names are SQL reserved words
  • Provide both the query and a one-line plain English translation of what it does

Quality Bar

A good output:

  • Query is syntactically correct for the stated dialect (PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite, etc.)
  • All column and table names match the provided schema exactly
  • JOIN conditions are valid and use the correct key types
  • The query actually answers the stated question

A bad output:

  • References a column not in the schema
  • SELECT * without justification in a query that should return specific columns
  • Missing GROUP BY for an aggregate query
  • JOIN on mismatched types (string ID to integer ID)

Good vs. Bad Examples

Scenario Bad Output Good Output
Schema: users(id, name), orders(user_id, total) SELECT * FROM orders SELECT u.name, SUM(o.total) FROM users u JOIN orders o ON u.id = o.user_id GROUP BY u.name
"top 10 customers" No LIMIT 10 or ORDER BY ORDER BY total DESC LIMIT 10
No schema provided Writes a query with invented columns "Could you share the table schema (column names and types)?"
"show me revenue by month" SELECT revenue without GROUP BY SELECT DATE_TRUNC('month', date), SUM(revenue) FROM orders GROUP BY 1

References

  • references/ — SQL dialect cheat sheet (PostgreSQL, MySQL, SQLite), JOIN types and when to use each, common intent-to-clause mapping
Usage Guidance
Install if you want help drafting SQL, but review generated queries before running them against real databases, especially for production or sensitive data. The included tests have minor quality failures, but I did not find a security concern.
Capability Tags
crypto
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The artifacts coherently describe converting natural language plus database schema into SQL, with explicit limits that it writes queries and does not execute them.
Instruction Scope
Runtime instructions are scoped to asking for schema, generating SQL, explaining SQL, and providing alternatives; no role override, hidden instruction, prompt-injection, or unrelated authority was found.
Install Mechanism
Installation is documented as ClawHub install or manual copy into the OpenClaw skills directory; no package install hook, startup hook, or executable installer is present.
Credentials
The skill does not request database connections, credentials, browser/session data, network access, broad filesystem access, or command execution to perform its stated function.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence mechanism, privilege escalation, background worker, scheduled task, or automatic mutation behavior was found.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install text-to-sql-jipeng
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /text-to-sql-jipeng
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release
Metadata
Slug text-to-sql-jipeng
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Text To Sql?

Use when (1) user describes what data they want in plain English and asks for the corresponding SQL query. (2) user says "write SQL for this", "convert to qu... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 49 downloads so far.

How do I install Text To Sql?

Run "/install text-to-sql-jipeng" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Text To Sql free?

Yes, Text To Sql is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Text To Sql support?

Text To Sql is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Text To Sql?

It is built and maintained by 王继鹏 (@wangjipeng977); the current version is v1.0.0.

💬 Comments