# Workflow ## Default decision order 1. Identify the scientific communication goal. 2. Probe the environment and available assets lightly. 3. Decide whether the evidence should be a figure, a table, or a paired figure+table deliverable. 4. Choose the strongest representation family. 5. Route to `pubfig`, `pubtab`, or both. 6. Produce the smallest runnable implementation. 7. Specify export outputs explicitly. 8. Run publication QA. 9. Propose revisions if the result is weak. ## Handoff checklist For every task, try to make these explicit: - claim the artifact is supposed to support - data shape and grouping structure - target audience or venue expectations - figure vs table role - exact output filenames and formats - whether the artifact is final, draft, or revision - whether the current environment can execute the proposed route immediately ## Delivery contract A strong response should make clear: - which artifact type was chosen, - why it was chosen, - which tool owns each artifact, - what the first runnable command/code path is, - what output files should be produced, - what still needs user input or upstream data. ## Default output priorities Prioritize in this order: 1. clarity of claim 2. correct artifact type 3. minimal runnable implementation 4. publication-ready export 5. QA and revision guidance ## Graceful degradation when tools are missing If `pubfig` or `pubtab` is not installed: - keep the workflow going, - provide installation guidance, - provide pseudocode or draft commands, - specify the recommended artifact structure, - preserve the QA and revision guidance. ## Figure / table split rules Use a **figure** when the reader needs to quickly perceive: - trend - distribution shape - relationship - calibration or diagnostic behavior - composition or hierarchy - visual comparison across a moderate number of groups Use a **table** when the reader needs: - exact numbers - many metrics side by side - benchmark grids - ablation matrices - appendix-style detail - reproducible value lookup Use **both** when: - the figure carries the visual claim, - the table preserves exact values, - or the paper section benefits from a fast visual summary plus precise numeric evidence.