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cloudflare

markdown-drafts

@cloudflare/markdown-drafts
cloudflare
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Updated 4/1/2026
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Use markdown formatting when drafting content intended for external systems (GitHub issues/PRs, Jira tickets, wiki pages, design docs, etc.) so formatting is preserved when the user copies it. Load this skill before producing any draft the user will paste elsewhere.

Installation

$npx agent-skills-cli install @cloudflare/markdown-drafts
Claude Code
Cursor
Copilot
Codex
Antigravity

Details

Path.opencode/skills/markdown-drafts/SKILL.md
Branchmain
Scoped Name@cloudflare/markdown-drafts

Usage

After installing, this skill will be available to your AI coding assistant.

Verify installation:

npx agent-skills-cli list

Skill Instructions


name: markdown-drafts description: Use markdown formatting when drafting content intended for external systems (GitHub issues/PRs, Jira tickets, wiki pages, design docs, etc.) so formatting is preserved when the user copies it. Load this skill before producing any draft the user will paste elsewhere.

Markdown Drafts

When the user asks you to draft, write, or compose content that will be copied into an external system — GitHub issues, pull request descriptions, Jira tickets, wiki pages, design documents, RFCs, or similar — always use markdown syntax so that formatting survives the copy-paste.

When This Applies

  • GitHub issues and pull request descriptions
  • Jira ticket descriptions and comments
  • Confluence / wiki page drafts
  • Design documents and RFCs
  • Slack messages (Slack renders a subset of markdown)
  • Any content the user explicitly says will be copied elsewhere

Formatting Rules

  • Use #, ##, ### headers to create structure
  • Use - or * for unordered lists, 1. for ordered lists
  • Use triple-backtick fenced code blocks with language tags (e.g., ```cpp) for code
  • Use inline code backticks for identifiers, file paths, commands, and config values
  • Use **bold** for emphasis on key points and _italic_ for secondary emphasis
  • Use markdown tables when presenting structured comparisons or data
  • Use > blockquotes for callouts, quoted text, or important notes
  • Use [link text](url) for references — never bare URLs in running prose
  • Use --- horizontal rules to separate major sections when appropriate
  • Use task lists (- [ ] / - [x]) when drafting action items or checklists
  • Keep line lengths reasonable (e.g., 80-120 characters)

Structure Guidelines

  • Start with a concise summary paragraph before diving into details
  • Use headers to break content into scannable sections
  • Keep paragraphs short — walls of text are hard to scan in issue trackers
  • Put the most important information first (inverted pyramid)
  • End with next steps, open questions, or action items when relevant

Rendering: Always Emit Raw Markdown

The chat interface renders markdown, which strips the raw syntax (###, **, `, etc.) from the output. Since these drafts are meant to be copied and pasted into external systems, the user needs the raw markup characters preserved.

Always wrap the entire draft in a fenced code block so the chat interface displays it as literal text. Use a plain triple-backtick fence (no language tag):

```
## My Heading

- bullet one
- **bold text** and `code`
```

This ensures the user sees and can copy the exact markdown source. Never render the draft as formatted text outside a code fence — the markup will be silently consumed by the chat UI.

What NOT To Do

  • Do not render the draft as formatted markdown outside a code fence — the user will lose the syntax
  • Do not use plain text formatting (e.g., ALL CAPS for headers, ==== underlines, manual indentation)
  • Do not use HTML tags unless the target system requires them and markdown is insufficient
  • Do not add emoji unless the user's draft style includes them or they explicitly request it
  • Do not use common cliche AI-generated phrases, tropes, or filler content like tricolons, or generic intros/outros. Be concise and to the point.
  • Do not include editorial comments or unsubstantiated claims. Stick to the facts and the user's instructions precisely. If you need to ask clarifying questions, do so instead of making assumptions.