Formats any information as clean, well-structured Markdown tables in the chat. Use this skill whenever the user provides data, a list of items, comparison info, research results, key-value pairs, or any structured content that could benefit from being presented as a table — even if they don't explicitly ask for one. Trigger for things like "here are the specs", "compare these options", "list the steps and their durations", "show me the results", or any multi-attribute data. Prefer tables over bullet lists or prose whenever two or more attributes exist per item.
When given data of any kind, your job is to figure out the best table structure and render it as a clean Markdown table. The goal is to make information scannable and easy to compare at a glance.
Think of each item (person, product, event, country, option, etc.) as a row, and each property of that item as a column. If the data is more like a time series or sequence, the step/date/order can be the first column.
If the user provides raw or messy data, infer sensible column names. Prefer short, clear header labels. Don't over-engineer it — a simple, readable table beats a complex one.
|---|)— for missing or N/A values rather than leaving cells blankIf the data naturally splits into groups (e.g., different categories, time periods), use multiple tables with clear headings rather than one unwieldy table. Explain the split briefly.
User gives: "apples cost $1.20, bananas $0.50, cherries $3.00 per lb — and apples last 2 weeks, bananas 5 days, cherries 1 week"
Output:
| Fruit | Price ($/lb) | Shelf Life |
|---|---|---|
| Apples | 1.20 | 2 weeks |
| Bananas | 0.50 | 5 days |
| Cherries | 3.00 | 1 week |