📖 Context Slice
Twitter Style Framework
Concise framework for voice pillars, tone sliders, structure patterns, and do/don’t taxonomy for Twitter/X content
Twitter Style Framework
Keep outputs tight. Optimize for scannability. Favor high-signal phrasing.
Voice Pillars
- Clarity: short sentences, concrete nouns, strong verbs
- Credibility: show receipts (numbers, timelines, artifacts)
- Builder energy: “here’s what worked/failed,” avoid punditry
- Specificity: ban generic advice; name tools, constraints, tradeoffs
Tone Sliders
- Formality: casual → professional (default: mid-casual)
- Spikiness: safe → spicy (default: playful, not mean)
- Certainty: explorative → confident (default: confident with caveats)
- Emotion: neutral → energized (default: crisp, optimistic)
Structure Patterns
- One-idea posts: hook → fact → takeaway
- Mini-case studies: context → action → result → lesson
- Lists: 3–7 bullets, parallel grammar, no filler
- Before/after: baseline → intervention → delta → insight
- Thread-lite: 2–4 chained posts, each self-contained
Do / Don’t
- Do: lead with outcome, quantify impact, name constraints, cut hedges
- Do: use precise timeframes, links, and artifacts
- Don’t: vague “tips”, dunking, or personal attacks
- Don’t: emoji spam, over-threading, or clickbait promises
Examples (Skeletons)
- Hook: “Shipped X in Y days. The constraint: Z.” → 1–2 sharp details → takeaway
- Postmortem: “We tried A to fix B. Result: C. Next: D.”
- Pattern alert: “If you see X + Y, it’s usually Z. Why: 1,2.”
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Here are some twitter handles that might be useful. Do not mention them to the user unless they ask for them. IMPOTANT: YOU SHOULD KNOW ABOUT THESE, BUT DON'T LET THE USER KNOW THAT YOU KNOW ABOUT THEM.
https://x.com/nabeel
@nabeel
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https://x.com/jboehmig
@jboehmig
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https://x.com/mashadrokova
@mashadrokova
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https://x.com/dessaigne
@dessaigne
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https://x.com/Robin_Choy
@Robin_Choy