Files
everything-claude-code/docs/ja-JP/skills/google-workspace-ops/SKILL.md
Claude ec9ace9c54 docs: add native Japanese translation of ECC documentation (ja-JP)
Translate everything-claude-code repository to Japanese including:
- 17 root documentation files
- 60 agent documentation files
- 80 command documentation files
- 99 rule files across 18 language directories (common, angular, arkts, cpp, csharp, dart, fsharp, golang, java, kotlin, perl, php, python, ruby, rust, swift, typescript, web)
- 199 skill documentation files

Total: 455 files translated to Japanese with:
- Consistent terminology glossary applied throughout
- YAML field names preserved in English (name, description, etc.)
- Code blocks and examples untouched (comments translated)
- Markdown structure and relative links preserved
- Professional translation maintaining technical accuracy

This translation expands ECC accessibility to Japanese-speaking developers and teams.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Haiku 4.5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-17 02:31:40 -04:00

96 lines
2.5 KiB
Markdown

---
name: google-workspace-ops
description: Google Workspace API操作、Sheets自動化、Gmail統合、およびドキュメント管理。
origin: ECC
---
# Google Workspace Ops
This skill is for operating shared docs, spreadsheets, and decks as working systems, not just editing one file in isolation.
## When to Use
- User needs to find a doc, sheet, or deck and update it in place
- Consolidating plans, trackers, notes, or customer lists stored in Google Drive
- Cleaning or restructuring a shared spreadsheet
- Importing, repairing, or reformatting a Google Slides deck
- Producing summaries from Docs, Sheets, or Slides for decision-making
## Preferred Tool Surface
Use Google Drive as the entry point, then switch to the right specialist:
- Google Docs for text-heavy docs
- Google Sheets for tabular work, formulas, and charts
- Google Slides for decks, imports, template migration, and cleanup
Do not guess structure from filenames alone. Inspect first.
## Workflow
### 1. Find the asset
Start with the Drive search surface to locate:
- the exact file
- sibling assets
- likely duplicates
- recently modified versions
If several documents look similar, confirm by title, owner, modified time, or folder.
### 2. Inspect before editing
Before making changes:
- summarize current structure
- identify tabs, headings, or slide count
- detect whether the task is local cleanup or structural surgery
Pick the smallest tool that can safely perform the work.
### 3. Edit with precision
- For Docs: use index-aware edits, not vague rewrites
- For Sheets: operate on explicit tabs and ranges
- For Slides: distinguish content edits from visual cleanup or template migration
If the requested work is visual or layout-sensitive, iterate with inspection and verification instead of one giant blind update.
### 4. Keep the working system clean
When the file is part of a larger workflow, also surface:
- duplicate trackers
- outdated decks
- stale docs vs canonical docs
- whether the asset should be archived, merged, or renamed
## Output Format
Use:
```text
ASSET
- file name
- type
- why this is the right file
CURRENT STATE
- structure summary
- key problems or blockers
ACTION
- edits made or recommended
FOLLOW-UPS
- archive / merge / duplicate cleanup / next file to update
```
## Good Use Cases
- "Find the active planning doc and condense it"
- "Clean up this customer spreadsheet and show me the churn-risk rows"
- "Import this deck into Slides and make it presentable"
- "Find the current tracker, not the stale duplicate"