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Office Snack Drawer Map

by haidong · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install office-snack-drawer-map
Description
Organize and map one office snack drawer into zones with refill lines and stale-item checks to keep snacks visible, tidy, and easy to restock.
README (SKILL.md)

Office Snack Drawer Map

Purpose

Create a practical office snack drawer map with zones, refill lines, stale-item checks, and focus-friendly choices. The goal is a small physical system that keeps work snacks visible, tidy, and easy to restock.

Use When

  • Work snacks vanish, expire, or clutter the desk area.
  • The user wants one drawer or shelf organized for a workday.
  • The user needs a printable map for zones, refill thresholds, and stale checks.
  • The user wants snack access to support work focus without creating a diet plan.

Do Not Use For

  • Nutrition, medical, allergy, weight-loss, calorie, macro, or supplement advice.
  • Diet plans, meal plans, fasting plans, or restriction rules.
  • Food safety inspection, workplace compliance, or shared-office policy decisions.
  • Buying recommendations that require current prices, recalls, or medical suitability.

Inputs To Ask For

Ask for:

  1. Drawer location and whether it is personal, shared, or guest-facing.
  2. Snacks currently in the drawer.
  3. Snacks the user wants to keep, remove, restock, or avoid.
  4. Containers, dividers, bins, labels, or space constraints available.
  5. Preferred zones, such as quick grab, long meeting, drink add-ins, backup, share, or restock.
  6. Stale-date, expiration-date, or open-date checks the user wants included.

If the user is in a hurry, offer a blank one-drawer template with common office snack zones.

Workflow

  1. Audit the current snack drawer or list what is usually stored there.
  2. Remove empty wrappers, stale items, expired items, or items the user no longer wants.
  3. Group remaining snacks by workday use case rather than health claims.
  4. Assign each group to a visible drawer zone.
  5. Add a refill line for each zone so the user knows when to restock.
  6. Add a stale check for open packages and dated items.
  7. Create a printable map and a short weekly reset checklist.

Output Format

Return the following sections.

Snack Drawer Snapshot

  • Drawer owner:
  • Drawer location:
  • Shared or personal:
  • Reset date:
  • Zone count:
  • Label style:

Drawer Zone Layout

Represent the drawer as a simple text map. Example:

Left Center Right
Quick grab Long meeting Drink add-ins
Backup stash Share items Refill notes

Adjust the layout to the user's drawer, shelf, basket, or cabinet.

Zone Labels

For each zone, include:

  • Zone name
  • What belongs here
  • What does not belong here
  • Refill line
  • Stale check or date note

Focus-Friendly Setup

Frame choices by work context, not nutrition claims:

  • Quick grab:
  • Long meeting:
  • Late afternoon backup:
  • Share or guest items:
  • Items to keep out of sight:

Refill And Remove List

  • Restock when low:
  • Use soon:
  • Remove if stale, expired, open too long, crushed, sticky, or unwanted:
  • Move elsewhere:

Weekly Drawer Reset

  • Toss wrappers and obvious trash.
  • Check dates and open packages.
  • Return snacks to labeled zones.
  • Move overflow to the backup area.
  • Update refill notes.

Example Prompts

  • "My office snack drawer is a chaos of half-empty bags and stale granola bars. Give me a zone map with refill lines and a weekly reset checklist."
  • "I share a snack drawer with two coworkers and it's always a mystery what's fresh. Create a zone layout with share, personal, and restock areas."
  • "I want a simple printable card for my desk drawer that shows quick-grab snacks, long-meeting backups, and a stale-check routine."

Safety And Boundaries

  • Do not provide nutrition, medical, allergy, calorie, macro, supplement, weight-loss, or diet advice.
  • Do not create meal plans or tell the user what they should eat for health reasons.
  • Do not claim a snack is healthy, safe, allergen-free, low-risk, or medically suitable.
  • Use the user's own preferences and labels for avoid, share, guest, or personal items.
  • For shared spaces, recommend clear ownership labels and workplace norms without making policy or legal claims.
  • Keep the scope to organizing one snack drawer, shelf, basket, or small cabinet.
Usage Guidance
This appears safe to install as a prompt-only organizing template. Use normal judgment for shared-office snacks, allergies, and food condition, since the skill intentionally does not provide medical or formal food-safety advice.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: office-snack-drawer-map Version: 1.0.1 The 'office-snack-drawer-map' skill is a prompt-only tool designed to help users organize office snacks. It contains no executable code, requires no network or API access, and includes explicit safety boundaries forbidding medical or nutritional advice (SKILL.md, skill.json).
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The stated purpose and instructions are coherent: create a printable snack drawer map with zones, refill lines, stale checks, and a weekly reset checklist.
Instruction Scope
The instructions are narrowly scoped to organizing one drawer, shelf, basket, or small cabinet and explicitly avoid nutrition, medical, allergy, diet, and compliance advice.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec, no required binaries, no package installation, no executable code, and no static scan findings.
Credentials
The skill requests only ordinary user-provided organizing details and produces text output; it does not request file, network, OS, account, or device access.
Persistence & Privilege
No persistence, background behavior, credentials, elevated privileges, local data indexing, or memory use is shown in the artifacts.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install office-snack-drawer-map
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /office-snack-drawer-map
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
V2 remediation: added Example Prompts, Clean Scan Evidence, Install-First Success Path
v1.0.0
- Initial release: organize and map an office snack drawer with zones for visibility, tidiness, and easy restocking. - Provides a guided workflow for auditing, sorting, labeling, and restocking snacks based on user preferences and work context. - Includes printable drawer zone map and weekly reset checklist. - Focuses solely on organization—excludes nutrition, health, allergy, or food-safety advice. - Offers customizable layouts and labels according to personal, shared, or guest-facing setups.
Metadata
Slug office-snack-drawer-map
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Office Snack Drawer Map?

Organize and map one office snack drawer into zones with refill lines and stale-item checks to keep snacks visible, tidy, and easy to restock. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 94 downloads so far.

How do I install Office Snack Drawer Map?

Run "/install office-snack-drawer-map" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Office Snack Drawer Map free?

Yes, Office Snack Drawer Map is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Office Snack Drawer Map support?

Office Snack Drawer Map is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Office Snack Drawer Map?

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

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