
reddit-post-drafter
Draft and lint Reddit posts calibrated for developer subreddits to avoid removals and maximize engagement.
skill install https://www.promptspace.in/skills/reddit-post-drafterNative Reddit Engagement for Developers
Stop sounding like a marketing bot when sharing your work. This skill helps developers draft, lint, and calibrate posts specifically for high-signal subreddits like r/programming, r/webdev, and r/LocalLLaMA. It solves the "instant removal" problem by analyzing subreddit-specific norms, flair requirements, and self-promotion thresholds before you hit post.
What it does
- Live Subreddit Calibration: Fetches recent posts to analyze current tone, successful title patterns, and active flair usage.
- Subreddit-Specific Profiles: Uses pre-baked knowledge for 6 major dev hubs (r/programming, r/webdev, r/ClaudeAI, r/LocalLLaMA, r/SideProject, r/opensource).
- Risk Assessment Linter: Runs your draft through a deterministic linter that flags "AI tells," marketing hype, and potential rule violations.
- Automated Rewriting: If a draft is flagged as high-risk, it generates a "safer" version that reframes your content to fit the community's technical expectations.
Why use this skill?
Unlike standard LLM prompts which often produce "Hey fellow Redditors!" cringe, this skill uses a structured Python-based linter and live search data. It forces your agent to look at what's actually working on the front page right now, ensuring your project launch or technical question gets engagement instead of a ban.
Use cases
- Convert marketing launch copy into technical-first Reddit discussions
- Identify common title patterns and flairs used in r/webdev via live search
- Audit post drafts for "AI tells" and cringe-worthy marketing jargon
- Generate safe rewrites for posts flagged as high-risk for removal
Example
Prompt
Output
[LINT RESULT] Subreddit: r/programming Risk: HIGH | Reason: Launch-style copy detected. Advice: Reframe as a technical walkthrough. Title: "Show HN: My App" -> "How we optimized Postgres locks for 10k concurrent users" Draft Score: 42/100 (Safe Rewrite Provided)