47 pointsby kirillklimuk5 hours ago12 comments
  • rnxrx16 minutes ago
    This is great - and another example of how much more efficient CLI tool use ends up being in actual day-to-day use. Claude Code and Hermes took it in and it runs great in my initial tries at it. Thanks for making and sharing it!
  • felooboolooomba2 hours ago
    I know that the office suite format is a relic which is hard to get rid of. But I can't help feeling that in these new AI era, that we should focus on leaving that proprietary format behind.

    It is one of the biggest facilitator of vendor lock in in the history of computing.

  • kirillklimuk5 hours ago
    I originally started this project just to build a TA agent for a professor who didn't have any TAs (my wife). So as you can imagine, it was critical that it could properly write comments and only edit with track edits mode on... and do all of this without accidentally breaking the structure of the doc that couldn't be read.

    It's since then expanded to cover everything from editing tables, hyperlinks, footnotes, and a lot more. Now it's a pretty powerful tool that can trivially fill out a MNDA form, mark up a contract, author a poetry booklet, and fill out an invoice, which is now the eval suite where the numbers in the title come from.

    You might be asking, "why did you do all of this?" Well, I'm building an agent harness for normies that are not gonna know what a token even is but just want their stuff not to take an epoch and a half to run. So I've got to make the tools be MUCH more optimal than they've even been.

    I figure putting them out to the community and inviting all of you to help me might be a way to do that =).

  • librasteve43 minutes ago
    this is awesome - I wonder how this would combine with DSL tools like https://slangify.org
    • kirillklimuk29 minutes ago
      honestly, worth a try! might be easier for the LLMs than authoring CLI commands.
  • firasd5 hours ago
    Very cool. So much of the 'capability overhang' of AI can be addressed with tools like this--data manipulation etc without LLMs having to galaxy brain everything in token space
    • kirillklimuk2 hours ago
      Yeah, I agree. Working on something like this for PDFs.
  • simlevesque4 hours ago
    I've done many custom low token output CLIs like this for my day job and it's something I expect to see much more of.
  • danielsmori3 hours ago
    Nice — CLI-first for document tooling is underrated. How are you handling embedded images in the XML? That was a pain point when I was parsing OOXML in a different context.
    • kirillklimuk2 hours ago
      If the reader needs the images, there's an explicit extract command that gets them into a folder. If the writer needs to update them, there's and explicit replace command and insert commands for that purpose. It all has to go into the relationship files of course.
  • rubyfan4 hours ago
    I haven’t looked under the hood here but to make simple text replacement via command line is an LLM even required? A human driven command line tool to do basic substitution on batches of files reliably would be amazing.
    • BorisMelnik4 hours ago
      there is a python library for docx handling. my thinking was the use case for this was for larger scale automations / document processing.
    • kirillklimuk2 hours ago
      Not really - if you wanna do a text replacement you can extract it yourself and do some work (or just use this CLI). The library is designed for longer workloads.
    • asdff3 hours ago
      sed, awk. docx is just zipped xml.
    • cyanydeez2 hours ago
      you've never dealt with ooxml.
      • rubyfan44 minutes ago
        Sadly I have spent lots of time with ooxml and pdf and my experience suggests there really aren’t reliable means for dealing with seemingly simple changes.
  • topaztee4 hours ago
    nice to see others try to solve a problem we also experienced.

    I'm also working on letting agents read/edit word docs but exposing it as a simple MCP

    www.vespper.com

  • MoAz064 hours ago
    I like it
  • ryuji_yasu2 hours ago
    [flagged]
  • gawkdevan hour ago
    [dead]