XLSX

作者: Anthropic

全面的試算表建立、編輯與分析,支援公式、格式設定、資料分析與視覺化。當 Claude 需要處理試算表(.xlsx、.xlsm、.csv、.tsv 等)以進行:(1) 建立含公式與格式的新試算表,(2) 讀取或分析資料,(3) 修改現有試算表並保留公式,(4) 試算表中的資料分析與視覺化,或 (5) 重新計算公式。 授權:專有。LICENSE.txt 包含完整條款。

npx skills add https://github.com/anthropics/skills --skill xlsx

Requirements for Outputs

All Excel files

Professional Font

  • Use a consistent, professional font (e.g., Arial, Times New Roman) for all deliverables unless otherwise instructed by the user

Zero Formula Errors

  • Every Excel model MUST be delivered with ZERO formula errors (#REF!, #DIV/0!, #VALUE!, #N/A, #NAME?)

Preserve Existing Templates (when updating templates)

  • Study and EXACTLY match existing format, style, and conventions when modifying files
  • Never impose standardized formatting on files with established patterns
  • Existing template conventions ALWAYS override these guidelines

Financial models

Color Coding Standards

Unless otherwise stated by the user or existing template

Industry-Standard Color Conventions

  • Blue text (RGB: 0,0,255): Hardcoded inputs, and numbers users will change for scenarios
  • Black text (RGB: 0,0,0): ALL formulas and calculations
  • Green text (RGB: 0,128,0): Links pulling from other worksheets within same workbook
  • Red text (RGB: 255,0,0): External links to other files
  • Yellow background (RGB: 255,255,0): Key assumptions needing attention or cells that need to be updated

Number Formatting Standards

Required Format Rules

  • Years: Format as text strings (e.g., "2024" not "2,024")
  • Currency: Use $#,##0 format; ALWAYS specify units in headers ("Revenue ($mm)")
  • Zeros: Use number formatting to make all zeros "-", including percentages (e.g., "$#,##0;($#,##0);-")
  • Percentages: Default to 0.0% format (one decimal)
  • Multiples: Format as 0.0x for valuation multiples (EV/EBITDA, P/E)
  • Negative numbers: Use parentheses (123) not minus -123

Formula Construction Rules

Assumptions Placement

  • Place ALL assumptions (growth rates, margins, multiples, etc.) in separate assumption cells
  • Use cell references instead of hardcoded values in formulas
  • Example: Use =B5*(1+$B$6) instead of =B5*1.05

Formula Error Prevention

  • Verify all cell references are correct
  • Check for off-by-one errors in ranges
  • Ensure consistent formulas across all projection periods
  • Test with edge cases (zero values, negative numbers)
  • Verify no unintended circular references

Documentation Requirements for Hardcodes

  • Comment or in cells beside (if end of table). Format: "Source: [System/Document], [Date], [Specific Reference], [URL if applicable]"
  • Examples:
    • "Source: Company 10-K, FY2024, Page 45, Revenue Note, [SEC EDGAR URL]"
    • "Source: Company 10-Q, Q2 2025, Exhibit 99.1, [SEC EDGAR URL]"
    • "Source: Bloomberg Terminal, 8/15/2025, AAPL US Equity"
    • "Source: FactSet, 8/20/2025, Consensus Estimates Screen"

XLSX creation, editing, and analysis

Overview

A user may ask you to create, edit, or analyze the contents of an .xlsx file. You have different tools and workflows available for different tasks.

Important Requirements

LibreOffice Required for Formula Recalculation: You can assume LibreOffice is installed for recalculating formula values using the scripts/recalc.py script. The script automatically configures LibreOffice on first run, including in sandboxed environments where Unix sockets are restricted (handled by scripts/office/soffice.py)

Reading and analyzing data

Data analysis with pandas

For data analysis, visualization, and basic operations, use pandas which provides powerful data manipulation capabilities:

import pandas as pd

# Read Excel
df = pd.read_excel('file.xlsx')  # Default: first sheet
all_sheets = pd.read_excel('file.xlsx', sheet_name=None)  # All sheets as dict

# Analyze
df.head()      # Preview data
df.info()      # Column info
df.describe()  # Statistics

# Write Excel
df.to_excel('output.xlsx', index=False)

Excel File Workflows

CRITICAL: Use Formulas, Not Hardcoded Values

Always use Excel formulas instead of calculating values in Python and hardcoding them. This ensures the spreadsheet remains dynamic and updateable.

❌ WRONG - Hardcoding Calculated Values

# Bad: Calculating in Python and hardcoding result
total = df['Sales'].sum()
sheet['B10'] = total  # Hardcodes 5000

# Bad: Computing growth rate in Python
growth = (df.iloc[-1]['Revenue'] - df.iloc[0]['Revenue']) / df.iloc[0]['Revenue']
sheet['C5'] = growth  # Hardcodes 0.15

# Bad: Python calculation for average
avg = sum(values) / len(values)
sheet['D20'] = avg  # Hardcodes 42.5

✅ CORRECT - Using Excel Formulas

# Good: Let Excel calculate the sum
sheet['B10'] = '=SUM(B2:B9)'

# Good: Growth rate as Excel formula
sheet['C5'] = '=(C4-C2)/C2'

# Good: Average using Excel function
sheet['D20'] = '=AVERAGE(D2:D19)'

This applies to ALL calculations - totals, percentages, ratios, differences, etc. The spreadsheet should be able to recalculate when source data changes.

Common Workflow

  1. Choose tool: pandas for data, openpyxl for formulas/formatting
  2. Create/Load: Create new workbook or load existing file
  3. Modify: Add/edit data, formulas, and formatting
  4. Save: Write to file
  5. Recalculate formulas (MANDATORY IF USING FORMULAS): Use the scripts/recalc.py script
    python scripts/recalc.py output.xlsx
    
  6. Verify and fix any errors:
    • The script returns JSON with error details
    • If status is errors_found, check error_summary for specific error types and locations
    • Fix the identified errors and recalculate again
    • Common errors to fix:
      • #REF!: Invalid cell references
      • #DIV/0!: Division by zero
      • #VALUE!: Wrong data type in formula
      • #NAME?: Unrecognized formula name

Creating new Excel files

# Using openpyxl for formulas and formatting
from openpyxl import Workbook
from openpyxl.styles import Font, PatternFill, Alignment

wb = Workbook()
sheet = wb.active

# Add data
sheet['A1'] = 'Hello'
sheet['B1'] = 'World'
sheet.append(['Row', 'of', 'data'])

# Add formula
sheet['B2'] = '=SUM(A1:A10)'

# Formatting
sheet['A1'].font = Font(bold=True, color='FF0000')
sheet['A1'].fill = PatternFill('solid', start_color='FFFF00')
sheet['A1'].alignment = Alignment(horizontal='center')

# Column width
sheet.column_dimensions['A'].width = 20

wb.save('output.xlsx')

Editing existing Excel files

# Using openpyxl to preserve formulas and formatting
from openpyxl import load_workbook

# Load existing file
wb = load_workbook('existing.xlsx')
sheet = wb.active  # or wb['SheetName'] for specific sheet

# Working with multiple sheets
for sheet_name in wb.sheetnames:
    sheet = wb[sheet_name]
    print(f"Sheet: {sheet_name}")

# Modify cells
sheet['A1'] = 'New Value'
sheet.insert_rows(2)  # Insert row at position 2
sheet.delete_cols(3)  # Delete column 3

# Add new sheet
new_sheet = wb.create_sheet('NewSheet')
new_sheet['A1'] = 'Data'

wb.save('modified.xlsx')

Recalculating formulas

Excel files created or modified by openpyxl contain formulas as strings but not calculated values. Use the provided scripts/recalc.py script to recalculate formulas:

python scripts/recalc.py <excel_file> [timeout_seconds]

Example:

python scripts/recalc.py output.xlsx 30

The script:

  • Automatically sets up LibreOffice macro on first run
  • Recalculates all formulas in all sheets
  • Scans ALL cells for Excel errors (#REF!, #DIV/0!, etc.)
  • Returns JSON with detailed error locations and counts
  • Works on both Linux and macOS

Formula Verification Checklist

Quick checks to ensure formulas work correctly:

Essential Verification

  • Test 2-3 sample references: Verify they pull correct values before building full model
  • Column mapping: Confirm Excel columns match (e.g., column 64 = BL, not BK)
  • Row offset: Remember Excel rows are 1-indexed (DataFrame row 5 = Excel row 6)

Common Pitfalls

  • NaN handling: Check for null values with pd.notna()
  • Far-right columns: FY data often in columns 50+
  • Multiple matches: Search all occurrences, not just first
  • Division by zero: Check denominators before using / in formulas (#DIV/0!)
  • Wrong references: Verify all cell references point to intended cells (#REF!)
  • Cross-sheet references: Use correct format (Sheet1!A1) for linking sheets

Formula Testing Strategy

  • Start small: Test formulas on 2-3 cells before applying broadly
  • Verify dependencies: Check all cells referenced in formulas exist
  • Test edge cases: Include zero, negative, and very large values

Interpreting scripts/recalc.py Output

The script returns JSON with error details:

{
  "status": "success",           // or "errors_found"
  "total_errors": 0,              // Total error count
  "total_formulas": 42,           // Number of formulas in file
  "error_summary": {              // Only present if errors found
    "#REF!": {
      "count": 2,
      "locations": ["Sheet1!B5", "Sheet1!C10"]
    }
  }
}

Best Practices

Library Selection

  • pandas: Best for data analysis, bulk operations, and simple data export
  • openpyxl: Best for complex formatting, formulas, and Excel-specific features

Working with openpyxl

  • Cell indices are 1-based (row=1, column=1 refers to cell A1)
  • Use data_only=True to read calculated values: load_workbook('file.xlsx', data_only=True)
  • Warning: If opened with data_only=True and saved, formulas are replaced with values and permanently lost
  • For large files: Use read_only=True for reading or write_only=True for writing
  • Formulas are preserved but not evaluated - use scripts/recalc.py to update values

Working with pandas

  • Specify data types to avoid inference issues: pd.read_excel('file.xlsx', dtype={'id': str})
  • For large files, read specific columns: pd.read_excel('file.xlsx', usecols=['A', 'C', 'E'])
  • Handle dates properly: pd.read_excel('file.xlsx', parse_dates=['date_column'])

Code Style Guidelines

IMPORTANT: When generating Python code for Excel operations:

  • Write minimal, concise Python code without unnecessary comments
  • Avoid verbose variable names and redundant operations
  • Avoid unnecessary print statements

For Excel files themselves:

  • Add comments to cells with complex formulas or important assumptions
  • Document data sources for hardcoded values
  • Include notes for key calculations and model sections

來自 Anthropic 的更多技能

Algorithmic Art
Anthropic
使用p5.js建立演算法藝術,包含種子隨機性與互動式參數探索。當使用者要求以程式碼創作藝術、生成式藝術、演算法藝術、流場或粒子系統時使用此功能。創作原創演算法藝術,避免抄襲現有藝術家作品以規避版權問題。 授權:完整條款請見LICENSE.txt
creativeofficial
Brand Guidelines
Anthropic
將Anthropic官方品牌色彩與字體應用於任何可能需要呈現Anthropic風格與視覺感受的成品。當涉及品牌色彩、風格指南、視覺格式或公司設計標準時使用此規範。 授權:完整條款請見LICENSE.txt
creativeofficial
Canvas Design
Anthropic
使用設計理念在 .png 和 .pdf 文件中創作精美的視覺藝術。當使用者要求製作海報、藝術作品、設計或其他靜態作品時,應使用此技能。創作原創視覺設計,切勿抄襲現有藝術家的作品以避免版權侵權。 授權條款:完整條款請見 LICENSE.txt
creativeofficial
Docx
Anthropic
全面的文件建立、編輯與分析,支援追蹤修訂、註解、格式保留及文字擷取。當Claude需要處理專業文件(.docx檔案)以進行:(1) 建立新文件、(2) 修改或編輯內容、(3) 處理追蹤修訂、(4) 新增註解,或其他文件相關任務時適用。 授權:專有軟體。完整條款請見LICENSE.txt。
documentofficial
Frontend Design
Anthropic
生成獨特且具備生產級品質的前端介面,避免常見的AI美學風格。
developmentfeaturedofficial
Internal Comms
Anthropic
一套資源,幫助我撰寫各種內部溝通內容,使用公司偏好的格式。每當需要撰寫內部溝通文件(如狀態報告、領導層更新、第三方更新、公司通訊、常見問題、事件報告、專案更新等)時,Claude 應使用此技能。 授權:完整條款請見 LICENSE.txt
official
MCP Builder
Anthropic
建立高品質 MCP(模型上下文協定)伺服器的指南,讓大型語言模型能透過設計完善的工具與外部服務互動。適用於建置 MCP 伺服器以整合外部 API 或服務時,無論是使用 Python(FastMCP)或 Node/TypeScript(MCP SDK)。 授權條款:完整條款請見 LICENSE.txt
developmentofficial
Artifacts Builder
Anthropic
用於創建精緻、多組件 claude.ai HTML 工件的一套工具,採用現代前端網頁技術(React、Tailwind CSS、shadcn/ui)。適用於需要狀態管理、路由或 shadcn/ui 元件的複雜工件,不適用於簡單的單一檔案 HTML/JSX 工件。 授權條款:完整條款請見 LICENSE.txt
development