File Organizer
Intelligently organizes your files and folders across your computer by understanding context, finding duplicates, suggesting better structures, and automating cleanup tasks.
Content
This skill acts as your personal organization assistant, helping you maintain a clean, logical file structure across your computer without the mental overhead of constant manual organization.
When to Use This Skill
- -Your Downloads folder is a chaotic mess
- -You can't find files because they're scattered everywhere
- -You have duplicate files taking up space
- -Your folder structure doesn't make sense anymore
- -You want to establish better organization habits
- -You're starting a new project and need a good structure
- -You're cleaning up before archiving old projects
What This Skill Does
1. Analyzes Current Structure: Reviews your folders and files to understand what you have
2. Finds Duplicates: Identifies duplicate files across your system
3. Suggests Organization: Proposes logical folder structures based on your content
4. Automates Cleanup: Moves, renames, and organizes files with your approval
5. Maintains Context: Makes smart decisions based on file types, dates, and content
6. Reduces Clutter: Identifies old files you probably don't need anymore
How to Use
From Your Home Directory
Then run Claude Code and ask for help:
Specific Organization Tasks
Instructions
When a user requests file organization help:
1. Understand the Scope
Ask clarifying questions:
- -Which directory needs organization? (Downloads, Documents, entire home folder?)
- -What's the main problem? (Can't find things, duplicates, too messy, no structure?)
- -Any files or folders to avoid? (Current projects, sensitive data?)
- -How aggressively to organize? (Conservative vs. comprehensive cleanup)
2. Analyze Current State
Review the target directory:
Summarize findings:
- -Total files and folders
- -File type breakdown
- -Size distribution
- -Date ranges
- -Obvious organization issues
3. Identify Organization Patterns
Based on the files, determine logical groupings:
By Type:
- -Documents (PDFs, DOCX, TXT)
- -Images (JPG, PNG, SVG)
- -Videos (MP4, MOV)
- -Archives (ZIP, TAR, DMG)
- -Code/Projects (directories with code)
- -Spreadsheets (XLSX, CSV)
- -Presentations (PPTX, KEY)
By Purpose:
- -Work vs. Personal
- -Active vs. Archive
- -Project-specific
- -Reference materials
- -Temporary/scratch files
By Date:
- -Current year/month
- -Previous years
- -Very old (archive candidates)
4. Find Duplicates
When requested, search for duplicates:
For each set of duplicates:
- -Show all file paths
- -Display sizes and modification dates
- -Recommend which to keep (usually newest or best-named)
- -Important: Always ask for confirmation before deleting
5. Propose Organization Plan
Present a clear plan before making changes:
[Directory]/
├── Work/
│ ├── Projects/
│ ├── Documents/
│ └── Archive/
├── Personal/
│ ├── Photos/
│ ├── Documents/
│ └── Media/
└── Downloads/
├── To-Sort/
└── Archive/
6. Execute Organization
After approval, organize systematically:
Important Rules:
- -Always confirm before deleting anything
- -Log all moves for potential undo
- -Preserve original modification dates
- -Handle filename conflicts gracefully
- -Stop and ask if you encounter unexpected situations
7. Provide Summary and Maintenance Tips
After organizing:
# Find files modified this week
find . -type f -mtime -7
# Sort downloads by type
[custom command for their setup]
# Find duplicates
[custom command]
Examples
Example 1: Organizing Downloads (From Justin Dielmann)
User: "My Downloads folder is a mess with 500+ files. Help me organize it."
Process:
1. Analyzes Downloads folder
2. Finds patterns: work docs, personal photos, installers, random PDFs
3. Proposes structure:
- -Downloads/
- -Work/
- -Personal/
- -Installers/ (DMG, PKG files)
- -Archive/
- -ToSort/ (things needing decisions)
4. Asks for confirmation
5. Moves files intelligently based on content and names
6. Results: 500 files → 5 organized folders
Example 2: Finding and Removing Duplicates
User: "Find duplicate files in my Documents and help me decide which to keep."
Output:
Example 3: Restructuring Projects Folder
User: "Review my ~/Projects directory and suggest improvements."
Output:
Projects/
├── Active/
│ ├── client-work/
│ ├── side-projects/
│ └── learning/
├── Archive/
│ ├── 2022/
│ ├── 2023/
│ └── 2024/
└── Templates/
Example 4: Organizing Photos by Date
User: "Organize my photo folders by year and month."
Output: Creates structure like:
Then moves photos based on EXIF data or file modification dates.
Common Organization Tasks
Downloads Cleanup
Project Organization
Duplicate Removal
Desktop Cleanup
Photo Organization
Work/Personal Separation
Pro Tips
1. Start Small: Begin with one messy folder (like Downloads) to build trust
2. Regular Maintenance: Run weekly cleanup on Downloads
3. Consistent Naming: Use "YYYY-MM-DD - Description" format for important files
4. Archive Aggressively: Move old projects to Archive instead of deleting
5. Keep Active Separate: Maintain clear boundaries between active and archived work
6. Trust the Process: Let Claude handle the cognitive load of where things go
Best Practices
Folder Naming
- -Use clear, descriptive names
- -Avoid spaces (use hyphens or underscores)
- -Be specific: "client-proposals" not "docs"
- -Use prefixes for ordering: "01-current", "02-archive"
File Naming
- -Include dates: "2024-10-17-meeting-notes.md"
- -Be descriptive: "q3-financial-report.xlsx"
- -Avoid version numbers in names (use version control instead)
- -Remove download artifacts: "document-final-v2 (1).pdf" → "document.pdf"
When to Archive
- -Projects not touched in 6+ months
- -Completed work that might be referenced later
- -Old versions after migration to new systems
- -Files you're hesitant to delete (archive first)
Related Use Cases
- -Setting up organization for a new computer
- -Preparing files for backup/archiving
- -Cleaning up before storage cleanup
- -Organizing shared team folders
- -Structuring new project directories
FAQ
Discussion
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