From skills
Removes AI-generated slop from prose (filler phrases, passive constructions) and code diffs (over-explained comments). Rewrites to sound natural and human.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/skills:deslopifyThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Strip the patterns that mark text as AI-generated. Preserve all factual
Strip the patterns that mark text as AI-generated. Preserve all factual content and the author's intended tone — change the delivery, not the message.
Scan for these before rewriting. The more you find, the more aggressive the edit.
Opening filler (cut 80% of the time — start with the actual point):
Hollow transitions:
Emphasis inflation:
AI vocabulary (replace with the plain word):
Excessive hedging:
Nominalization (convert to verb):
Bullet lists where prose would be clearer: not every list needs to be a list. Three related sentences often read better as a paragraph.
En-dash used as em-dash: – should be — (or just a comma)
When the input is a diff (or the user asks to remove AI comments from code):
What to remove:
// increment counter above counter++)// TODO: implement, // Handle error)What to keep:
Hard constraint: DO NOT modify any code. Only remove comments. No refactoring, no style changes, no removing try/catch or null checks. If you spot code slop, note it in the summary but leave it.
Output: report 1–3 sentences on what was removed and any code issues noticed but left unchanged.
npx claudepluginhub kriscard/skillsRemoves AI artifacts (tool names, boilerplate, over-structuring) from documents. Processes single files, directories, or git diffs.
Humanizes AI-generated text in project files, READMEs, docs, and blogs by detecting and fixing 24 documented AI writing patterns. Interactive workflow with input selection, content type, and intensity options.
Humanizes AI-generated text by removing patterns like inflated symbolism, promotional language, em dash overuse, and rule of three per Wikipedia guide. Use for editing drafts and reviewing content.