Claude Skill
917Dhj/DeepPaperNote
DeepPaperNote is an agent skill for deep-reading a single paper and generating high-quality Obsidian-style research notes. Works with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Copilot, Gemini CLI, and more.
Overview
Repository
Install this Skill
npx skills add 917Dhj/DeepPaperNoteRegistry
npx skills add 917Dhj/DeepPaperNotenpx skills add 917Dhj/DeepPaperNote -a codexnpx skills add 917Dhj/DeepPaperNote -a claude-codegit clone https://github.com/917Dhj/DeepPaperNote.git ~/.codex/skills/DeepPaperNotegit clone https://github.com/917Dhj/DeepPaperNote.git ~/.claude/skills/DeepPaperNote
Summary
DeepPaperNote is an agent skill designed for deep-reading a single academic paper and generating high-quality Obsidian-style research notes. It works seamlessly with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Copilot, Gemini CLI, and other AI coding assistants.
DeepPaperNote 是一种用于深度阅读单篇论文并生成高质量Obsidian风格研究笔记的智能体技能。适用于Claude Code、Codex、Cursor、Copilot、Gemini CLI等工具。
Key features
- Deep-reads a single paper and produces structured Obsidian-style notes
- Compatible with Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, Copilot, Gemini CLI, and more
- Outputs clean Markdown formatted for research note-taking
- Integrates with Zotero for citation management
- Lightweight Python-based agent skill
Use cases
- Quickly extract key insights from a research paper
- Create reusable Obsidian notes for literature review
- Enhance paper reading workflow with AI coding assistants
- Build a personal knowledge base from academic papers
README excerpt
<div align="center"> # DeepPaperNote **Turn a complex paper into an Obsidian note you will actually want to keep.** [English](./README.md) | [简体中文](./README.zh-CN.md) [](https://917dhj.github.io/DeepPaperNote/) [](https://github.com/917Dhj/DeepPaperNote) [](https://github.com/917Dhj/DeepPaperNote/releases/tag/v2.0.0) [](./LICENSE) [](./SKILL.md) [](./references/obsidian-format.md) [](./references/figure-placement.md) [](./references/model-synthesis.md) [](./CHANGELOG.md) </div> [](https://917dhj.github.io/DeepPaperNote/) **Do you often run into this situation: you want to study a classic paper carefully, but the hardest part is no longer reading it — it is turning that reading into usable notes?** The real time sink usually looks like this: - jumping back and forth between PDFs, Zotero, web pages, and your note app - manually organizing metadata, abstracts, figures, and the method backbone - understanding part of the paper, but still spending a long time turning that understanding into structured notes - ending up with a note that looks complete but is not something you actually want to revisit l