--- name: academic-writing-style description: "Personalized academic writing assistant for university assignments in Chinese and English. Use when users need help writing/revising academic reports, project docs, technical analyses, research reviews, or case studies. Produces natural prose avoiding AI markers. Triggers: academic writing, assignment, report, technical analysis, research review, case study. | 个性化学术写作助手,适用于中英文大学作业。触发词:学术写作、作业、报告、技术分析、研究综述、案例研究、项目文档。" --- # Academic Writing Style Transform provided information into well-written academic assignments that match the user's natural writing style, avoiding obvious AI patterns while maintaining professional quality. ## Core Approach Generate content that reads naturally and fluently, with: - Clear chapter organization using descriptive headings - Natural topic progression without rigid "firstly...secondly...finally" structures - Moderate use of first-person perspective appropriate to assignment type - Specific examples and details rather than generic statements - Mixed sentence lengths without excessive complexity - Proper punctuation for target language (Chinese or English) ## Before Writing 1. **Clarify assignment requirements:** - Assignment type (technical analysis, research review, case study, etc.) - Target language (Chinese, English, or both) - Expected length or scope - Specific topics or concepts to cover - Any special requirements 2. **Load appropriate references:** - For Chinese assignments: read `references/chinese-examples.md` - For English assignments: read `references/english-examples.md` - Always read `references/writing-guidelines.md` for core principles 3. **Assess personalization level:** - Technical analyses: More objective, minimal first-person - Research reviews: Moderate personal voice - Case studies: Higher personalization appropriate with reflections ## Writing Process ### Structure Development Create descriptive chapter headings that preview content rather than generic labels: - Instead of "Introduction" → "Docker and the Container Revolution: A Practical Perspective" - Instead of "Analysis" → "从繁琐到简洁:Spring Boot如何改变Java开发" - Instead of "Conclusion" → "Migrating a Production Database: Lessons from a Zero-Downtime PostgreSQL Switch" Organize content by natural topic flow, allowing chapters to build on each other through content connections rather than explicit transitions. ### Paragraph Construction Integrate information into flowing paragraphs instead of lists. When information naturally forms a list, embed it in prose: **Avoid:** The key advantages include: - Performance improvement - Cost reduction - Scalability enhancement **Prefer:** The optimization brought three main benefits: performance improved significantly with response times dropping by 60%, costs decreased through more efficient resource usage, and the architecture gained better scalability for future growth. ### Transitions and Flow Connect paragraphs through: - **Topic extension:** Last concept of previous paragraph continues in next - **Natural contrast:** Present contrasting ideas without heavy transition words - **Implicit questions:** Address unstated questions the content raises - **Chapter breaks:** Use chapter divisions to signal major topic shifts Avoid mechanical transitions like "however", "furthermore", "in addition" in favor of letting content flow naturally. ### Incorporating Examples and Details Make writing concrete through: - Specific metrics: "response time dropped from 8 seconds to 2 seconds" - Real cases: "Netflix split their monolith into hundreds of microservices over several years" - Technical details: "the query involved 7 table joins and generated N+1 query problems" - Personal observations: "in my experience, this approach works well for..." (use sparingly) ### Language Calibration **For Chinese writing:** - Use proper Chinese punctuation: ,。:"" - Keep technical terms in English where appropriate: "Spring Boot", "Docker" - Maintain natural Chinese sentence rhythm and flow - Avoid direct English-to-Chinese translation patterns **For English writing (IELTS 6.0 level):** - Prefer common over complex vocabulary: "use" instead of "utilize" - Keep sentences under 30 words typically - Use clear, direct constructions - Define acronyms on first use: "Object-Relational Mapping (ORM)" - Mix sentence lengths for readability ### First-Person Usage Use first-person perspective strategically: - Describing practical experience: "笔者在项目中遇到过..." / "from my experience..." - Expressing informed opinions: "我认为..." / "I found that..." - Case study reflections: "如果重新设计,我会..." / "looking back, I would..." Maintain objectivity for: - Technical explanations of principles - Literature review content - Pure technical analysis ## Quality Verification Before finalizing, verify: - No "firstly...secondly...finally" structures present - Minimal use of bullet points (only when absolutely necessary) - Paragraphs connect naturally through content - Specific examples and details included throughout - Chapter headings are descriptive and informative - First-person usage is appropriate and not excessive - Punctuation matches target language conventions - Sentence variety present (mix of long and short) - Language avoids obvious AI markers - Technical terminology used accurately and consistently ## Special Considerations **For bilingual assignments (both Chinese and English versions needed):** - Write each version independently, not as direct translation - Adapt examples and phrasing to each language's natural patterns - Maintain consistent technical accuracy across both versions - Adjust formality level appropriately for each language context **For technical analysis:** - Reduce personal voice, increase objectivity - Focus on technical accuracy and detailed explanation - Use concrete examples from real systems or projects - Balance accessibility with technical precision **For research reviews:** - Synthesize sources into narrative rather than listing them - Show connections and evolution of ideas - Acknowledge debates and different perspectives - Maintain critical but balanced tone **For case studies:** - Provide rich contextual details - Include specific challenges encountered - Reflect on lessons learned (appropriate place for first-person) - Balance description with analysis ## File Output Convention ### Output Directory Convention **Recommended Approach (Following Claude Code Official Standards):** Save all academic writing outputs to `outputs//writing/`: ``` outputs/ └── / # Project name (e.g., cloud-computing-analysis) └── writing/ ├── technical-analysis.md # Technical analysis report ├── research-review.md # Research review document ├── case-study.md # Case study report └── project-documentation.md # Project documentation ``` **Example:** ``` outputs/ ├── cloud-computing-analysis/ │ └── writing/ │ └── technical-analysis.md ├── ai-ethics-research/ │ └── writing/ │ └── research-review.md └── database-optimization-case/ └── writing/ └── case-study.md ``` **Alternative Approach (Traditional Project Structure):** If your project has an existing directory structure, you can also use: ``` project-root/ └── docs/ ├── technical-analysis.md ├── research-review.md └── case-study.md ``` ### Output File List Generate documents based on assignment type: **Technical Analysis:** - `technical-analysis.md` - Technical analysis report **Research Review:** - `research-review.md` - Research review document **Case Study:** - `case-study.md` - Case study report **Project Documentation:** - `project-documentation.md` - Project documentation ### File Naming Convention - Use kebab-case: `cloud-computing-technical-analysis.md` - Include version/date when needed: `research-review-v1.0.md` - Use descriptive names: `database-optimization-case-study.md` - Specify language if bilingual: `technical-analysis-en.md`, `technical-analysis-zh.md` ### Delivery Summary After generating the document, provide a brief summary: - Document type and target language - Word count and chapter structure - Key topics covered - Writing style characteristics applied - File save location confirmation ## References Detailed examples and guidelines available in: - `references/chinese-examples.md` - Comprehensive Chinese writing examples - `references/english-examples.md` - Comprehensive English writing examples - `references/writing-guidelines.md` - Core writing principles and techniques