superlab 0.1.55 → 0.1.56

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
package/lib/i18n.cjs CHANGED
@@ -2052,6 +2052,15 @@ ZH_CONTENT[path.join(".codex", "skills", "lab", "stages", "write.md")] = `# \`/l
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  - 不要假定固定的写作顺序,例如 Method 一定先于 Experiments;formal naming 可以先在 Method、Experiments 或其他 section 里出现。
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  - 如果某个 section 必须先用 canonical short names、model labels 或 ablation labels,而正式定义这些命名的 section 还没写到,就在当前 section 先做一次本地命名桥接(local naming bridge),用一句简短映射把解释性短语对齐到 canonical 的 paper-facing labels,然后后文统一复用这些 canonical labels。
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  - 一旦 paper-facing 模型名或消融名锁定,后续 prose、表格、caption 和排序摘要都必须复用 canonical label,不要再换回“完整模型”“去除结构主干”这类叙述性别名。
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+ - 不要默认当前 section 可以无限继续压句子;在同一个 section 上做新的 tighten、compress 或 polish 之前,先过一遍 section-level acceptance gate。
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+ - section-level acceptance gate 至少要显式确认命名一致性、前后文一致性、claim / metric / ranking 与当前证据的一致性、局部清晰度和局部简洁度。
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+ - 如果任何一项还没过,就先解决这个 blocker,而不是继续做 prose polish。
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+ - 不要把下一步建议默认写成“继续收紧一轮”;应该优先指出第一个没过的 acceptance item,或者在本轮已接受时直接停止。
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+ - 不要把 \`\\resizebox{\\linewidth}{!}{...}\` 当成主表默认的宽度解决方案。
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+ - 主表如果超宽,先重构表:缩短表头但保留局部解释,把次要指标移到 appendix-only,减少或拆分列,最后才保守调整 \`\\tabcolsep\`;只有这些都做过仍然超宽时,才允许把 \`\\resizebox\` 当成最后手段。
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+ - 调整 \`\\tabcolsep\` 时保持保守,不要把 paper-facing 主表压到大约 \`3pt\` 以下;优先用 \`4pt\` 或 \`5pt\` 这类仍可读的范围。
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+ - 不要把 \`\\scriptsize\` 或 \`\\tiny\` 当成主表默认的适配策略;如果必须靠激进缩小字体才能塞进页面,优先重构表本身。
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+ - 如果主表使用了 \`\\resizebox\` 或非常规宽度控制,就在同一张表的表注里解释宽度处理理由。
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  - reader-facing prose 里不要使用包含 \`_\` 或 \`-\` 的标签名。
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  - 内部标识符、配置键和实验包标签默认不要进正文;若必须出现,也只能给读者映射一次,然后移回正文之外。
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  - 不要靠堆术语来制造学术感;如果本轮引入或改写了关键术语,就在用户可见的轮次总结里补一段简短术语说明,并把 terminology-clarity 自检写进 write iteration artifact。
@@ -2065,6 +2074,7 @@ ZH_CONTENT[path.join(".codex", "skills", "lab", "stages", "write.md")] = `# \`/l
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  - 如果 \`paper-plan\` 校验失败,就先补 \`.lab/writing/plan.md\`,不能直接跳去写 prose。
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  - 普通草稿轮次在改完当前 section 后,必须运行 \`.lab/.managed/scripts/validate_section_draft.py --section <section> --section-file <section-file> --mode draft\` 和 \`.lab/.managed/scripts/validate_paper_claims.py --section-file <section-file> --mode draft\`。
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  - 普通草稿轮次里,这两类校验先按 warning 处理;warning 必须写进 write iteration artifact,不能假装没看到。
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+ - 如果要建议继续 tighten、compress 或 polish 同一个 section,必须先把 section-level acceptance gate 写进 write iteration artifact。
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  - \`paper-plan\` 里还必须写清资产覆盖目标、问题设定或 teaser 图,以及一个额外 analysis asset。
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  - 最终定稿或导出轮次里,必须维护非空的 \`references.bib\`,并把关键实验结果物化成真正的 LaTeX 表格:
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  - \`<deliverables_root>/paper/tables/main-results.tex\`
@@ -1,8 +1,8 @@
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  {
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  "stage_prompt": {
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- "codex_en": "This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.",
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- "claude_en": "This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.",
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- "codex_zh": "本命令运行 `/lab:write` 阶段。把 `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` 当成模板选择、paper-plan、section 参考、校验 gate、资产覆盖和最终 manuscript 规则的单一来源。读取与当前 section 对应的 paper-writing reference 和 bundled example-bank 文件,一次只修改一个 section;普通草稿轮次把写作校验当 warning,最终定稿或导出轮次必须满足 write-stage 的接受 gate。普通起草轮次先跟随 `workflow_language`,普通 `.tex` section 草稿也必须先停留在 `workflow_language`,不能把 `paper_language` 当成默认草稿语言,并把 workflow-language 论文层当成正式持久化产物,而不是 review 层。workflow-language 层必须是一套完整的 LaTeX 镜像,至少包含 `workflow-language/main.tex`、`workflow-language/references.bib`、`workflow-language/sections/*.tex`、`workflow-language/tables/*.tex`、`workflow-language/figures/*.tex` 和 `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`。不要再把新的 workflow-language 输出写到已经废弃的 review 层路径,例如 `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`。把 `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` 作为写作期 glossary,用来沉淀全称、批准缩写、对外解释和可接受别名。无论当前语言是什么,都要满足同一套学术可读性标准:如果本轮引入或改写了关键术语、缩写、指标名、机制名或系统标签,就先写全称;如果后面要复用短写,就在首次出现时定义;同时说明它是什么、为什么在这里重要,保持一个概念只有一个 paper-facing 名称,并尽量避免新造的连字符拼接标签。相同的首次解释规则也适用于表头、caption、表注和图注;如果术语第一次出现在表里,就必须在同一张表里局部解释。主表必须局部自足:读者只看表题、表头、表注和邻近引入或解读,就应当知道每行是什么、每列是什么、指标方向是什么,以及需要的单位、分母或触发条件。表头可以短,但表里的缩写必须在同表局部展开。如果 Method 或 Experiments 承诺了一组指标,主表就必须直接展示这些指标,或者明确标成 appendix-only 并解释原因;如果某个指标因为恒为零、冗余或只放附录而不单列,也必须在表注里显式说明,不能静默省略。内部标识符默认不要进入 reader-facing prose;若必须出现,只能在完成一次读者映射后使用,并把 terminology-clarity 自检和 table-semantics 审计一起写进 write iteration artifact。如果当前稿件将从托管默认 scaffold 开始,且还没有模板决定,就先追问一次:继续使用默认 scaffold,还是先接入模板目录。如果进入最终定稿时 `workflow_language` 与 `paper_language` 不一致,就先完成并保留 workflow-language 论文层,再追问一次:保持当前语言,还是把 canonical manuscript 转成 `paper_language`;先持久化这个决定,再在最新 write iteration 里记录语言决策和 workflow-language 论文层路径,最后才允许按该语言修改最终稿。",
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- "claude_zh": "本命令运行 lab workflow 的 `write` 阶段。把 `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` 当成模板选择、paper-plan、section 参考、校验 gate、资产覆盖和最终 manuscript 规则的单一来源。读取与当前 section 对应的 paper-writing reference 和 bundled example-bank 文件,一次只修改一个 section;普通草稿轮次把写作校验当 warning,最终定稿或导出轮次必须满足 write-stage 的接受 gate。普通起草轮次先跟随 `workflow_language`,普通 `.tex` section 草稿也必须先停留在 `workflow_language`,不能把 `paper_language` 当成默认草稿语言,并把 workflow-language 论文层当成正式持久化产物,而不是 review 层。workflow-language 层必须是一套完整的 LaTeX 镜像,至少包含 `workflow-language/main.tex`、`workflow-language/references.bib`、`workflow-language/sections/*.tex`、`workflow-language/tables/*.tex`、`workflow-language/figures/*.tex` 和 `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`。不要再把新的 workflow-language 输出写到已经废弃的 review 层路径,例如 `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`。把 `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` 作为写作期 glossary,用来沉淀全称、批准缩写、对外解释和可接受别名。无论当前语言是什么,都要满足同一套学术可读性标准:如果本轮引入或改写了关键术语、缩写、指标名、机制名或系统标签,就先写全称;如果后面要复用短写,就在首次出现时定义;同时说明它是什么、为什么在这里重要,保持一个概念只有一个 paper-facing 名称,并尽量避免新造的连字符拼接标签。相同的首次解释规则也适用于表头、caption、表注和图注;如果术语第一次出现在表里,就必须在同一张表里局部解释。主表必须局部自足:读者只看表题、表头、表注和邻近引入或解读,就应当知道每行是什么、每列是什么、指标方向是什么,以及需要的单位、分母或触发条件。表头可以短,但表里的缩写必须在同表局部展开。如果 Method 或 Experiments 承诺了一组指标,主表就必须直接展示这些指标,或者明确标成 appendix-only 并解释原因;如果某个指标因为恒为零、冗余或只放附录而不单列,也必须在表注里显式说明,不能静默省略。内部标识符默认不要进入 reader-facing prose;若必须出现,只能在完成一次读者映射后使用,并把 terminology-clarity 自检和 table-semantics 审计一起写进 write iteration artifact。如果当前稿件将从托管默认 scaffold 开始,且还没有模板决定,就先追问一次:继续使用默认 scaffold,还是先接入模板目录。如果进入最终定稿时 `workflow_language` 与 `paper_language` 不一致,就先完成并保留 workflow-language 论文层,再追问一次:保持当前语言,还是把 canonical manuscript 转成 `paper_language`;先持久化这个决定,再在最新 write iteration 里记录语言决策和 workflow-language 论文层路径,最后才允许按该语言修改最终稿。"
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+ "codex_en": "This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\\resizebox{\\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\\scriptsize` or `\\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.",
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+ "claude_en": "This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\\resizebox{\\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\\scriptsize` or `\\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.",
5
+ "codex_zh": "本命令运行 `/lab:write` 阶段。把 `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` 当成模板选择、paper-plan、section 参考、校验 gate、资产覆盖和最终 manuscript 规则的单一来源。读取与当前 section 对应的 paper-writing reference 和 bundled example-bank 文件,一次只修改一个 section;普通草稿轮次把写作校验当 warning,最终定稿或导出轮次必须满足 write-stage 的接受 gate。普通起草轮次先跟随 `workflow_language`,普通 `.tex` section 草稿也必须先停留在 `workflow_language`,不能把 `paper_language` 当成默认草稿语言,并把 workflow-language 论文层当成正式持久化产物,而不是 review 层。workflow-language 层必须是一套完整的 LaTeX 镜像,至少包含 `workflow-language/main.tex`、`workflow-language/references.bib`、`workflow-language/sections/*.tex`、`workflow-language/tables/*.tex`、`workflow-language/figures/*.tex` 和 `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`。不要再把新的 workflow-language 输出写到已经废弃的 review 层路径,例如 `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`。把 `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` 作为写作期 glossary,用来沉淀全称、批准缩写、对外解释和可接受别名。无论当前语言是什么,都要满足同一套学术可读性标准:如果本轮引入或改写了关键术语、缩写、指标名、机制名或系统标签,就先写全称;如果后面要复用短写,就在首次出现时定义;同时说明它是什么、为什么在这里重要,保持一个概念只有一个 paper-facing 名称,并尽量避免新造的连字符拼接标签。相同的首次解释规则也适用于表头、caption、表注和图注;如果术语第一次出现在表里,就必须在同一张表里局部解释。不要假定当前 section 可以无限继续压句子;在同一个 section 上做新的 tighten、compress 或 polish 之前,先过一遍 section-level acceptance gate。这个 gate 至少要显式确认命名一致性、前后文一致性、claim / metric / ranking 与当前证据的一致性、局部清晰度和局部简洁度。如果任何一项还没过,就先解决这个 blocker,不要默认继续 prose polish,也不要把下一步建议自动写成“再收紧一轮”。主表必须局部自足:读者只看表题、表头、表注和邻近引入或解读,就应当知道每行是什么、每列是什么、指标方向是什么,以及需要的单位、分母或触发条件。表头可以短,但表里的缩写必须在同表局部展开。如果 Method 或 Experiments 承诺了一组指标,主表就必须直接展示这些指标,或者明确标成 appendix-only 并解释原因;如果某个指标因为恒为零、冗余或只放附录而不单列,也必须在表注里显式说明,不能静默省略。不要把 `\\resizebox{\\linewidth}{!}{...}` 当成主表默认的宽度解决方案。主表如果超宽,先重构表:缩短表头但保留局部解释,把次要指标移到 appendix-only,减少或拆分列,最后才保守调整 `\\tabcolsep`;只有这些都做过仍然超宽时,才允许把 `\\resizebox` 当成最后手段,而且必须在同一张表的表注里解释宽度处理理由。不要把 `\\scriptsize` 或 `\\tiny` 当成主表默认的适配策略。内部标识符默认不要进入 reader-facing prose;若必须出现,只能在完成一次读者映射后使用,并把 terminology-clarity 自检、section-level acceptance gate 和 table-semantics 审计一起写进 write iteration artifact。如果当前稿件将从托管默认 scaffold 开始,且还没有模板决定,就先追问一次:继续使用默认 scaffold,还是先接入模板目录。如果进入最终定稿时 `workflow_language` 与 `paper_language` 不一致,就先完成并保留 workflow-language 论文层,再追问一次:保持当前语言,还是把 canonical manuscript 转成 `paper_language`;先持久化这个决定,再在最新 write iteration 里记录语言决策和 workflow-language 论文层路径,最后才允许按该语言修改最终稿。",
6
+ "claude_zh": "本命令运行 lab workflow 的 `write` 阶段。把 `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` 当成模板选择、paper-plan、section 参考、校验 gate、资产覆盖和最终 manuscript 规则的单一来源。读取与当前 section 对应的 paper-writing reference 和 bundled example-bank 文件,一次只修改一个 section;普通草稿轮次把写作校验当 warning,最终定稿或导出轮次必须满足 write-stage 的接受 gate。普通起草轮次先跟随 `workflow_language`,普通 `.tex` section 草稿也必须先停留在 `workflow_language`,不能把 `paper_language` 当成默认草稿语言,并把 workflow-language 论文层当成正式持久化产物,而不是 review 层。workflow-language 层必须是一套完整的 LaTeX 镜像,至少包含 `workflow-language/main.tex`、`workflow-language/references.bib`、`workflow-language/sections/*.tex`、`workflow-language/tables/*.tex`、`workflow-language/figures/*.tex` 和 `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`。不要再把新的 workflow-language 输出写到已经废弃的 review 层路径,例如 `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`。把 `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` 作为写作期 glossary,用来沉淀全称、批准缩写、对外解释和可接受别名。无论当前语言是什么,都要满足同一套学术可读性标准:如果本轮引入或改写了关键术语、缩写、指标名、机制名或系统标签,就先写全称;如果后面要复用短写,就在首次出现时定义;同时说明它是什么、为什么在这里重要,保持一个概念只有一个 paper-facing 名称,并尽量避免新造的连字符拼接标签。相同的首次解释规则也适用于表头、caption、表注和图注;如果术语第一次出现在表里,就必须在同一张表里局部解释。不要假定当前 section 可以无限继续压句子;在同一个 section 上做新的 tighten、compress 或 polish 之前,先过一遍 section-level acceptance gate。这个 gate 至少要显式确认命名一致性、前后文一致性、claim / metric / ranking 与当前证据的一致性、局部清晰度和局部简洁度。如果任何一项还没过,就先解决这个 blocker,不要默认继续 prose polish,也不要把下一步建议自动写成“再收紧一轮”。主表必须局部自足:读者只看表题、表头、表注和邻近引入或解读,就应当知道每行是什么、每列是什么、指标方向是什么,以及需要的单位、分母或触发条件。表头可以短,但表里的缩写必须在同表局部展开。如果 Method 或 Experiments 承诺了一组指标,主表就必须直接展示这些指标,或者明确标成 appendix-only 并解释原因;如果某个指标因为恒为零、冗余或只放附录而不单列,也必须在表注里显式说明,不能静默省略。不要把 `\\resizebox{\\linewidth}{!}{...}` 当成主表默认的宽度解决方案。主表如果超宽,先重构表:缩短表头但保留局部解释,把次要指标移到 appendix-only,减少或拆分列,最后才保守调整 `\\tabcolsep`;只有这些都做过仍然超宽时,才允许把 `\\resizebox` 当成最后手段,而且必须在同一张表的表注里解释宽度处理理由。不要把 `\\scriptsize` 或 `\\tiny` 当成主表默认的适配策略。内部标识符默认不要进入 reader-facing prose;若必须出现,只能在完成一次读者映射后使用,并把 terminology-clarity 自检、section-level acceptance gate 和 table-semantics 审计一起写进 write iteration artifact。如果当前稿件将从托管默认 scaffold 开始,且还没有模板决定,就先追问一次:继续使用默认 scaffold,还是先接入模板目录。如果进入最终定稿时 `workflow_language` 与 `paper_language` 不一致,就先完成并保留 workflow-language 论文层,再追问一次:保持当前语言,还是把 canonical manuscript 转成 `paper_language`;先持久化这个决定,再在最新 write iteration 里记录语言决策和 workflow-language 论文层路径,最后才允许按该语言修改最终稿。"
7
7
  }
8
8
  }
@@ -7,4 +7,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
7
7
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.claude/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
8
8
 
9
9
  Execute the requested `/lab-write` command against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
10
- This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
10
+ This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -7,4 +7,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
7
7
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.claude/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
8
8
 
9
9
  Execute the requested `/lab-write` command against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
10
- This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
10
+ This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -7,4 +7,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
7
7
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.claude/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
8
8
 
9
9
  Execute the requested `/lab-write` command against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
10
- This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
10
+ This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -7,4 +7,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
7
7
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.claude/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
8
8
 
9
9
  Execute the requested `/lab-write` command against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
10
- This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
10
+ This command runs the `write` stage of the lab workflow. Use `.claude/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -6,4 +6,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
6
6
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.codex/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
7
7
 
8
8
  Execute the requested `/lab:write` stage against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
9
- This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
9
+ This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -6,4 +6,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
6
6
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.codex/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
7
7
 
8
8
  Execute the requested `/lab:write` stage against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
9
- This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
9
+ This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -6,4 +6,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
6
6
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.codex/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
7
7
 
8
8
  Execute the requested `/lab:write` stage against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
9
- This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
9
+ This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -6,4 +6,4 @@ argument-hint: section or writing target
6
6
  Use the installed `lab` skill at `.codex/skills/lab/SKILL.md`.
7
7
 
8
8
  Execute the requested `/lab:write` stage against the user's argument now. Do not only recommend another lab stage. If a blocking prerequisite is missing, say exactly what is missing and ask at most one clarifying question.
9
- This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
9
+ This command runs the `/lab:write` stage. Use `.codex/skills/lab/stages/write.md` as the single source of truth for template choice, paper-plan requirements, section references, validator gates, asset coverage, and final manuscript rules. Read the matching paper-writing reference and any bundled example-bank files for the requested section, revise only one section, and keep draft rounds warning-only while final-draft or export rounds must satisfy the write-stage acceptance gates. Draft ordinary manuscript rounds in `workflow_language`, and ordinary `.tex` section drafts must stay in `workflow_language` instead of treating `paper_language` as the default draft language. Treat the workflow-language paper layer as a real persisted artifact rather than a review layer, and preserve it as a full LaTeX mirror with `workflow-language/main.tex`, `workflow-language/references.bib`, `workflow-language/sections/*.tex`, `workflow-language/tables/*.tex`, `workflow-language/figures/*.tex`, and `workflow-language/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`. Do not write new workflow-language output to deprecated review-layer paths such as `docs/lab/paper/review_zh/`. Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage glossary for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases. Apply the same academic readability standard in every language: when the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, mechanism names, or system labels, use the full form first, define any short form at first mention, explain what the term is and why it matters here, keep one natural-language paper-facing name per concept, use natural-language full names in prose, do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose, apply the same first-mention rule to table headers, table captions, table notes, and figure captions or labels, do not assume a fixed drafting order such as Method before Experiments, add a local naming bridge when a section uses canonical short names before their defining section has been drafted, and reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias. Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first. That gate must explicitly confirm naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision. If any gate item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further, and do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Main tables must be locally self-contained: the title, header, note, and adjacent prose should tell the reader what each row and column means, the metric direction, and any relevant unit, denominator, or event condition. Short headers remain allowed, but abbreviations in paper-facing tables must be expanded locally in the same table. If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why. If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it. Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table. Fit main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort, keep width changes readable, and explain the width-control rationale locally in the same table note. Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. Keep internal identifiers out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose, and record both the terminology-clarity self-check, the section-level acceptance gate, and the table-semantics audit in the write iteration artifact. If the manuscript would start from the managed scaffold and no template decision is recorded yet, ask once whether to keep the default scaffold or attach a template directory first. If finalization reaches a round where `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, finish and preserve the workflow-language paper layer first, then ask once whether to keep the draft language or convert the canonical manuscript to `paper_language`, persist that answer, record both the language decision and the workflow-language paper-layer path in the latest write iteration, and only then edit the final manuscript in the chosen language.
@@ -29,6 +29,7 @@ REQUIRED_TABLE_NOTE_MARKERS = (
29
29
  "% Comparison scope:",
30
30
  "% Important caveat:",
31
31
  )
32
+ WIDTH_CONTROL_NOTE_MARKER = "% Width control:"
32
33
  TABLE_ABBREVIATION_EXCEPTIONS = {"TODO", "TBD"}
33
34
 
34
35
 
@@ -187,6 +188,20 @@ def check_table_file(path: Path, issues: list[str], label: str):
187
188
  for token in sorted(detect_uppercase_abbreviations(text)):
188
189
  if not has_local_abbreviation_expansion(local_context, token):
189
190
  issues.append(f"{label} uses abbreviation `{token}` without local expansion")
191
+ has_width_control_note = WIDTH_CONTROL_NOTE_MARKER in text
192
+ if r"\resizebox{" in text and not has_width_control_note:
193
+ issues.append(f"{label} uses \\resizebox without a local width-control note")
194
+ if r"\setlength{\tabcolsep}" in text and not has_width_control_note:
195
+ issues.append(f"{label} adjusts \\tabcolsep without a local width-control note")
196
+ if r"\scriptsize" in text or r"\tiny" in text:
197
+ issues.append(f"{label} must not use \\scriptsize or \\tiny as the default main-table fit strategy")
198
+ for match in re.finditer(r"\\setlength\{\\tabcolsep\}\{([0-9]+(?:\.[0-9]+)?)pt\}", text):
199
+ try:
200
+ value = float(match.group(1))
201
+ except ValueError:
202
+ continue
203
+ if value < 3.0:
204
+ issues.append(f"{label} sets \\tabcolsep below the safe range for paper-facing main tables")
190
205
 
191
206
 
192
207
  def check_figure_file(path: Path, issues: list[str], label: str):
@@ -34,6 +34,78 @@ def contains_any(text: str, needles: tuple[str, ...]) -> bool:
34
34
  return any(needle.lower() in lowered for needle in needles)
35
35
 
36
36
 
37
+ def strip_latex_commands(text: str) -> str:
38
+ text = re.sub(r"%.*", " ", text)
39
+ text = re.sub(r"\\[A-Za-z@*]+(?:\[[^\]]*\])?", " ", text)
40
+ text = text.replace("{", " ").replace("}", " ")
41
+ return text
42
+
43
+
44
+ def has_local_naming_bridge(text: str) -> bool:
45
+ return contains_any(
46
+ text,
47
+ (
48
+ "we denote",
49
+ "we refer to",
50
+ "we call",
51
+ "hereafter",
52
+ "简称为",
53
+ "记为",
54
+ "记作",
55
+ "下文记为",
56
+ "以下记为",
57
+ ),
58
+ )
59
+
60
+
61
+ def check_common_section_gate_risks(text: str, issues: list[str]):
62
+ prose_text = strip_latex_commands(text)
63
+ if re.search(r"\b[a-z0-9]+(?:_[a-z0-9]+)+\b", prose_text):
64
+ issues.append(
65
+ "reader-facing prose appears to contain internal identifier-like tokens; map them once for the reader and move them back out of prose before more polishing"
66
+ )
67
+
68
+ comparison_context = contains_any(
69
+ prose_text,
70
+ (
71
+ "compare",
72
+ "comparison",
73
+ "ablation",
74
+ "variant",
75
+ "baseline",
76
+ "ranking",
77
+ "models",
78
+ "比较",
79
+ "消融",
80
+ "变体",
81
+ "基线",
82
+ "排序",
83
+ "模型",
84
+ ),
85
+ )
86
+ descriptive_alias_risk = contains_any(
87
+ prose_text,
88
+ (
89
+ "full model",
90
+ "complete model",
91
+ "variant that removes",
92
+ "variant without",
93
+ "removes calibration",
94
+ "removes the structure",
95
+ "完整模型",
96
+ "完整版本",
97
+ "去除",
98
+ "移除",
99
+ "不含",
100
+ "不带",
101
+ ),
102
+ )
103
+ if comparison_context and descriptive_alias_risk and not has_local_naming_bridge(prose_text):
104
+ issues.append(
105
+ "comparative section appears to introduce descriptive variant aliases without an explicit local naming bridge; stabilize canonical labels before more prose polish"
106
+ )
107
+
108
+
37
109
  def check_abstract(text: str, issues: list[str]):
38
110
  numbers = re.findall(r"\b\d+(?:\.\d+)?\b", text)
39
111
  if len(numbers) > 6:
@@ -161,6 +233,7 @@ def main():
161
233
 
162
234
  text = read_text(section_path)
163
235
  issues: list[str] = []
236
+ check_common_section_gate_risks(text, issues)
164
237
  SECTION_CHECKS[args.section](text, issues)
165
238
 
166
239
  if not issues:
@@ -15,4 +15,5 @@ Baseline & 0.0000 & 0.0000 \\
15
15
  % Metric definitions: expand local abbreviations, units, denominators, or event conditions.
16
16
  % Comparison scope: explain which setting, split, attack family, or benchmark scope this table covers.
17
17
  % Important caveat: state any omitted metrics, zero-valued metrics, or appendix-only reporting decision.
18
+ % Width control: first shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, and reduce or split columns; only then adjust \setlength{\tabcolsep}{...} conservatively or use \resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...} as a documented last resort.
18
19
  \end{table}
@@ -40,6 +40,15 @@
40
40
  - Did any alias drift remain unresolved:
41
41
  - Remaining reader-facing jargon risk:
42
42
 
43
+ ## Section Acceptance Gate
44
+
45
+ - Canonical naming consistency passed:
46
+ - Adjacent-section consistency passed:
47
+ - Claim / metric / ranking consistency with evidence passed:
48
+ - Local clarity passed:
49
+ - Local concision passed:
50
+ - If any item failed, what blocks further prose polish:
51
+
43
52
  ## Table Semantics
44
53
 
45
54
  - Metrics promised in Method:
@@ -224,12 +224,19 @@ Use this skill when the user invokes `/lab:*` or asks for the structured researc
224
224
  - If a section uses canonical short names or variant labels before the section that formally defines them has been drafted, add a local naming bridge in that section and then keep those labels stable.
225
225
  - Keep one canonical natural-language paper-facing name per concept.
226
226
  - Once a paper-facing model or ablation label is chosen, reuse the canonical label instead of replacing it with a narrative alias in later prose, tables, or captions.
227
+ - Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first.
228
+ - The section-level acceptance gate must explicitly check canonical naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim/metric/ranking consistency with evidence, local clarity, and local concision.
229
+ - If any section-level acceptance item is unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of polishing sentences further.
227
230
  - Use natural-language full names in prose, and define any approved short form once before reusing it.
228
231
  - Do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose.
229
232
  - Main tables must be locally self-contained: a reader should be able to understand row meaning, column meaning, metric direction, and any relevant unit or denominator from the table title, table note, and adjacent prose without chasing the Method section.
230
233
  - If Method or Experiments prose promises a metric family, the main table set must either expose that metric family directly or mark the missing items as appendix-only and explain why.
231
234
  - Short table headers are allowed, but any abbreviation in a paper-facing table must be expanded locally in the same table.
232
235
  - If a metric is measured but omitted because it is zero everywhere, redundant, or appendix-only, state that decision explicitly in the table note instead of silently dropping it.
236
+ - Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default main-table fit strategy.
237
+ - Fit paper-facing main tables by redesign first: shorten headers, move secondary metrics out of the main table, reduce or split columns, then adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively; only use `\resizebox` as a last resort and document why.
238
+ - Keep `\tabcolsep` adjustments conservative and avoid shrinking below a roughly readable floor for paper-facing main tables.
239
+ - Do not rely on `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default way to make a main table fit.
233
240
  - Keep internal identifiers out of prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose.
234
241
  - Do not rely on unexplained jargon density as a substitute for academic tone.
235
242
  - Bind each claim to evidence from `report`, iteration reports, or normalized summaries.
@@ -241,6 +248,7 @@ Use this skill when the user invokes `/lab:*` or asks for the structured researc
241
248
  - Keep terminology stable across rounds and sections.
242
249
  - Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage source for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, allowed aliases, and terms that should stay out of prose.
243
250
  - When a round introduces or revises key terms, include a compact terminology note in the user-facing write summary and record the terminology-clarity self-check in the latest write iteration artifact.
251
+ - Record the section-level acceptance gate in the latest write iteration artifact before recommending another tighten/compress/polish pass on the same section.
244
252
  - If a claim is not supported by evidence, weaken or remove it.
245
253
  - Treat tables, figures, citations, and bibliography as core manuscript content rather than optional polish.
246
254
  - Keep paper-facing LaTeX free of absolute local paths, rerun ids, shell transcripts, and internal workflow provenance.
@@ -102,6 +102,10 @@ Run these on every round:
102
102
  - If a section must use canonical short names, model labels, or ablation labels before the section that formally introduces them has been drafted, add a local naming bridge in that section that briefly maps the descriptive phrase to the canonical paper-facing labels and then reuse those labels consistently.
103
103
  - Keep one canonical natural-language paper-facing name per concept. Do not let one concept drift across paper-facing names, experiment labels, and internal identifiers.
104
104
  - Once a paper-facing model or ablation label is chosen, reuse the canonical label in later prose, tables, captions, and ranking summaries instead of replacing it with a narrative alias.
105
+ - Before any additional tighten, compress, or polish pass on the same section, run a section-level acceptance gate first.
106
+ - The section-level acceptance gate is passed only when canonical naming consistency, adjacent-section consistency, claim, metric, and ranking consistency with the current evidence, local clarity, and local concision are all explicitly checked and no unresolved blocker remains.
107
+ - If any section-level acceptance item is still unresolved, spend the round fixing that blocker instead of doing more prose polish.
108
+ - Do not default the next-step recommendation to another polish pass. Recommend the first unresolved section-level blocker, or stop if the section is already accepted for the round.
105
109
  - Use natural-language full names in prose. If an approved short form is needed later, define it once and reuse it consistently.
106
110
  - Do not use labels containing `_` or `-` in reader-facing prose.
107
111
  - Keep internal identifiers, config keys, and experiment package labels out of reader-facing prose unless they are mapped once for the reader and then moved back out of prose.
@@ -110,6 +114,11 @@ Run these on every round:
110
114
  - Short headers remain allowed, but they must be resolved locally through the same table's caption or table note instead of forcing the reader to chase the Method section.
111
115
  - If the Method or Experiments prose says the paper reports a metric family, the main table set must either expose those metrics directly or explicitly mark the missing ones as appendix-only and explain why.
112
116
  - If a metric is measured but omitted because it is uniformly zero, redundant, or appendix-only, state that disposition explicitly in the caption or table note instead of silently dropping it.
117
+ - Do not treat `\resizebox{\linewidth}{!}{...}` as the default way to fit a main table.
118
+ - Main-table width control should follow this order: shorten headers while preserving local explanations, move secondary metrics to appendix-only, reduce or split columns, adjust `\tabcolsep` conservatively, and only then consider `\resizebox` as a last resort.
119
+ - When `\tabcolsep` is adjusted for a paper-facing main table, keep it in a safe range and avoid shrinking below roughly `3pt`; prefer `4pt` or `5pt` when a small reduction is enough.
120
+ - Do not use `\scriptsize` or `\tiny` as the default main-table fit strategy. If a table only fits after aggressive font shrinking, redesign the table instead of forcing it into the page.
121
+ - If a paper-facing main table uses `\resizebox` or non-default width control, explain the width-control rationale in the same table note.
113
122
  - Every main table should have a short table-introduction sentence before it and a short interpretation sentence after it so the reader knows what question the table answers and how to read the result.
114
123
  - Build the paper asset plan before prose when the section carries introduction, experimental, method, related-work, or conclusion claims:
115
124
  - record the asset coverage targets and gaps for the current paper
@@ -143,6 +152,7 @@ Run these on every round:
143
152
  - `<deliverables_root>/paper/analysis/analysis-asset.tex`
144
153
  - Table assets must use paper-facing LaTeX structure with `booktabs`, caption, label, and consistent precision.
145
154
  - Table assets must also include a local table note that explains row meaning, column meaning, metric definitions, comparison scope, and any important caveat.
155
+ - Table assets must not rely on aggressive width hacks by default; if width control is still needed after table redesign, document it locally and keep it readable.
146
156
  - Figure placeholders must explain what the final figure should show and why the reader needs it.
147
157
  - Core asset coverage for a paper-facing final draft should include a problem-setting or teaser figure, a method overview figure, a results overview figure, a main-results table, an ablation table, and one additional analysis asset.
148
158
  - Keep `.lab/writing/plan.md` synchronized with the current table plan, figure plan, citation plan, and section-to-asset map whenever manuscript assets change.
@@ -156,6 +166,7 @@ Run these on every round:
156
166
  - Record what changed and why in a write-iteration artifact.
157
167
  - Maintain `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` as the write-stage source for full forms, approved short forms, reader-facing explanations, and aliases whenever terminology changes.
158
168
  - When a round introduces or revises key terms, include a compact terminology note in the user-facing round summary and record the terminology-clarity self-check in the write-iteration artifact.
169
+ - Record the section-level acceptance gate in the write-iteration artifact before recommending further tightening on the same section.
159
170
  - When `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, record the final manuscript language choice in the write-iteration artifact with the workflow language, paper language, finalization decision, and why that decision was chosen.
160
171
  - When `workflow_language` and `paper_language` differ, also record the persisted workflow-language paper-layer path in the write-iteration artifact.
161
172
  - Keep the handoff wording in the write-iteration artifact explicit and stable: say what is completed, what scope is frozen for the next round, what the next owner is allowed to do, what they must read first, and what counts as accept, revise, or reject.
@@ -202,4 +213,6 @@ Run these on every round:
202
213
  - If a missing assumption would change the section structure or claim strength, ask one clarifying question at a time.
203
214
  - If there are multiple defensible narrative structures for the current section, present 2-3 approaches with trade-offs and recommend one before drafting.
204
215
  - Keep an approval gate when the chosen narrative structure would materially affect downstream sections or paper-level framing.
216
+ - If the user asks to continue tightening the same section, default to a section-level acceptance review first instead of another immediate prose-polish pass.
217
+ - Only recommend another tighten/compress/polish pass after the current section has passed the section-level acceptance gate.
205
218
  - If the round introduces or revises key terms, abbreviations, metrics, or mechanism names, include a short terminology note in the final user-facing response that says the full form, approved short form if any, what each term is, and why it matters here, and point to `.lab/writing/terminology-glossary.md` plus the write iteration artifact for the full terminology audit.
package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
1
1
  {
2
2
  "name": "superlab",
3
- "version": "0.1.55",
3
+ "version": "0.1.56",
4
4
  "description": "Strict /lab research workflow installer for Codex and Claude",
5
5
  "keywords": [
6
6
  "codex",