typst-author

📁 apcamargo/typst-skills 📅 7 days ago
1
总安装量
1
周安装量
#49249
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/apcamargo/typst-skills --skill typst-author

Agent 安装分布

amp 1
opencode 1
kimi-cli 1
codex 1
claude-code 1

Skill 文档

typst-author skill

Overview

This skill helps agents generate, edit, and reason about Typst documents. It provides quick‑start examples, detailed workflows, and links to the full Typst documentation (guides, tutorials, reference).

Minimal document example

#set document(title: "My Document", author: "Author Name")
#set page(numbering: "1")
#set text(lang: "en")

// Enable paragraph justification and character-level justification
#set par(
  justify: true,
  justification-limits: (
    tracking: (min: -0.012em, max: 0.012em),
    spacing: (min: 75%, max: 120%),
  )
)

#title[My Document]

= Heading 1

This is a paragraph in Typst.

== Heading 2

#lorem(50)

Workflows

  • Creating a new Typst project: Use the “Minimal document example” above as a starting point. Skim the tutorial for the basics (docs/tutorial/writing-in-typst.md), then create the .typ file(s).
  • Editing existing content: Locate the target text and apply changes; confirm syntax against the reference when needed (docs/reference/).
  • Formatting & Styling: Consult the styling guide (docs/reference/styling.md) for set rule, show rule, and custom themes.

Documentation

  • Guides: docs/guides/*.md
  • Tutorials: docs/tutorial/*.md
  • Full reference tree: docs/reference/**/*.md

Detailed instructions

  1. PRIORITY: Trust local documentation. Your internal training data regarding Typst may be outdated or hallucinated. Always verify function names, parameters, and syntax against the local docs/ folder before generating code.
  2. Read the relevant documentation (use Read/Grep/Glob on the paths above).
  3. Generate or modify the .typ source according to the user’s request.
  4. Validate the generated Typst by running typst compile (if tool access is allowed).
  5. Provide the final .typ content and optionally a rendered preview (PDF/HTML).

Quick syntax reference

Critical distinctions

Hash usage (markup vs code)

  • Use # to start a code expression inside markup or content blocks; it disambiguates code from text. This is required for content-producing function calls and field access in markup: #figure[...], #image("file.png"), text(...)[#numbering(...)].
  • Do not use # inside code contexts (argument lists, code blocks, show-rule bodies). Example: #figure(image("file.png")) (no # before image).
  • Reference: docs/reference/scripting.md, docs/tutorial/writing-in-typst.md
// Incorrect (missing # inside content block)
text(...)[(numbering(...))]

// Correct
text(...)[(#numbering(...))]

Styling rules: set vs show

  • set: Set rule to configure optional parameters on element functions (style defaults scoped to the current block or file).
  • show: Show rule to target selected elements and apply a set rule or transform/replace the element output.
  • Use set for common styling; use show for selective or structural changes (e.g., heading.where(level: 1), labels, text, regex).
// Set rule: configure optional parameters for an element type
#set heading(numbering: "I.")
#set text(font: "New Computer Modern")

// Show-set rule: apply a set rule only to selected elements
#show heading: set text(navy)

// Show transform rule: replace/reshape element output
#show heading: it => block[#emph(it.body)]

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Calling things “tuples” (Typst only has arrays).
  • Using [] for arrays (use () instead).
  • Accessing array elements with arr[0] (use arr.at(0)).
  • Omitting # in markup/content blocks (e.g., text(...)[numbering(...)] should be text(...)[#numbering(...)]).
  • Using # inside code contexts (e.g., figure(#image("x.png")) in an argument list).
  • Mixing up content blocks [] with code blocks {}.
  • Forgetting to include the namespace when accessing imported variables/functions (e.g., use color.hsl instead of just hsl).
  • Using LaTeX syntax (do NOT use \begin{...}, \section, or other LaTeX commands).
  • Hallucinating environments (e.g., tabular does not exist; use table).

Advanced features

For large projects

When working on large projects, consider organizing the project across multiple files.

Troubleshooting

Missing font warnings

If you see “unknown font family” warnings, remove the font specification to use system defaults. Note: Font warnings don’t prevent compilation; the document will use fallback fonts.

Template/Package not found

If import fails with “package not found”:

  • Verify exact package name and version on Typst Universe.
  • Check for typos in @preview/package:version syntax.
  • Remember: Typst uses fully qualified imports with specific versions – there’s no package cache to update.

Compilation errors

Common fixes:

  • “expected content, found …”: You’re using code where markup is expected – wrap in #{ } or use proper syntax.
  • “expected expression, found …”: Missing # (or #(...)) in markup/content blocks.
  • “unknown variable”: Check spelling, ensure imports are correct.
  • Array/dictionary errors: Review syntax – use () for both, dictionaries need key: value, singleton arrays are (elem,).