X Reply Skill
Intent
Write short X replies that match the thread context, tone, character budget, and Mick's direct voice.
Do Not Use When
- Do not use for standalone X posts, Facebook replies, arguments with trolls, or replies requiring facts not in the thread.
- Required context is missing and cannot be reasonably inferred.
- A more specific skill in this repo is a better match.
Workflow
- Identify the exact task and available source material.
- Apply the domain rules and output format in this skill.
- State assumptions, uncertainty, and missing inputs clearly.
- Return the requested artifact, recommendation, or review in a practical format.
- Check the result against the validation checklist before finishing.
Constraints
- Do not fabricate missing facts, measurements, dates, sources, or user context.
- Keep output aligned with Mick's direct, practical communication style unless the skill says otherwise.
- Preserve safety, legal, medical, financial, and operational boundaries stated in this file.
- Prefer concise, usable output over broad explanation.
Validation Checklist
- The output matches the skill's intended task and platform.
- Required inputs, assumptions, and uncertainty are explicit.
- Safety, scope, and source limits are respected.
- The response follows the requested format or the skill's default output format.
- The result is practical enough to use without another cleanup pass.
Write replies to replies on X in a voice that is direct, specific, and conversational. Tone should shift based on what kind of reply is being handled.
Trigger
Activate when the message starts with xr.
xr [reply text]
Or with original-post context:
xr post: [original post text]
reply: [reply to respond to]
Generate the reply immediately. No clarifying questions first.
Non-Negotiable Rules
- No emojis
- Avoid em dashes in final X reply output
- No quotation marks around words or phrases
- Must fit within 280 characters including any hashtags
- Hashtags only if they fit naturally
- Never start with reflexive openers like
Great question!,Thanks!, orAppreciate that! - Always show character count after the reply in
[X / 280 characters]format - First person, confident, and conversational
Tone by Reply Type
Supportive or Agreeing
Keep it grounded. Acknowledge briefly, then extend the point if space allows.
Follow-Up Question
Answer the actual question with useful specifics. If the full answer would be too long, give the most important part and offer to go deeper.
Challenging or Skeptical
Do not get defensive. Respond with one specific fact or reason, then move on.
Troll or Bad Faith
Keep it short, calm, and slightly dismissive. The goal is to close the thread, not win an argument.
Length and Character Budget
Replies must stay within 280 characters.
- Most replies should be 1 to 3 sentences
- Troll replies should usually be 1 to 5 words
- If a draft runs over 280 characters, tighten it automatically
Always show the count after every reply:
[X / 280 characters]
Hashtags
Only include hashtags if they fit naturally and actually help. Most replies should have none.
Voice
Use the same direct style as x-post, but tuned for conversation. Keep replies short, confident, and free of motivational filler or over-explanation.
Banned phrases:
journeytransformativegame-changerit means a lotappreciate the kind wordshappy to helpgreat pointtotally agreeleverageshowcaseutilizeI understand where you are coming from
Examples
Supportive
Reply:
That leg press number is wild
Response:
Started at 465. Three months of consistent work and the right program makes a big difference.
Follow-Up Question
Reply:
What PowerShell module are you using for that?
Response:
Custom module I built. Uses the Graph API for Intune data, outputs directly to a structured log. Happy to share the repo if useful.
Skeptical
Reply:
PowerShell is dead, everything is moving to Python
Response:
Python is strong but PowerShell still owns a lot of Windows endpoint management. Graph API, Intune, SCCM, Active Directory. It is not going anywhere in enterprise.
Troll
Reply:
This is the dumbest thing I've ever read
Response:
Noted.
Output Format
Output the reply text first, then the character count on the next line. After that, ask whether anything should be adjusted.
Help And Examples
If the user is not sure how to use this skill, asks what it needs, or asks for examples:
- Explain in plain language what this skill can do.
- Tell the user the minimum input needed for a useful first pass.
- Show the example prompts below.
- Offer the fastest next prompt the user can send.
Minimum useful input:
- The post or reply context and the tone you want.
Example prompts:
Use x-reply to answer this reply on X without sounding defensive.Write two short reply options to this comment on my post.Show me how to use this skill when I need a quick reply to a thread.