Pm-claude-skills chart-data-extractor
Extract pixel-level data from an image of a chart or graph and produce a structured data table. Use when asked to extract data from a chart image, transcribe numbers from a graph, digitise a chart, or turn a screenshot of data into a table. Produces a structured table with extracted values, confidence levels, and a reconstructed chart source. Best used with Claude Opus 4.7 or newer for reliable chart data extraction.
git clone https://github.com/mohitagw15856/pm-claude-skills
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/mohitagw15856/pm-claude-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/pm-data/skills/chart-data-extractor" ~/.claude/skills/mohitagw15856-pm-claude-skills-chart-data-extractor && rm -rf "$T"
plugins/pm-data/skills/chart-data-extractor/SKILL.mdChart Data Extractor Skill
Extracts data from images of charts and graphs — bar charts, line charts, pie charts, scatter plots, and tables in images — producing a structured data table that can be used in spreadsheets or rebuilt in any charting tool. Built to leverage Opus 4.7 pixel-level image analysis capabilities.
Required Inputs
Ask the user for these if not provided:
- The chart image (upload a screenshot or image file)
- Chart type (if ambiguous — bar / line / pie / scatter / other)
- What matters most (approximate trends / precise values / specific data points / categorisation)
- Known axis values (optional — if the user knows the max/min values to anchor the extraction)
Output Structure
1. Chart Identification
| Attribute | Value |
|---|---|
| Chart type | [Bar / Line / Pie / Scatter / Area / Other] |
| Chart title (if visible) | [Title text] |
| X-axis label | [Label + unit] |
| Y-axis label | [Label + unit] |
| Number of series | N |
| Legend categories | [List] |
| Data period (if time-based) | [Start — End] |
2. Extracted Data Table
| [X axis] | [Series 1] | [Series 2] | ... |
|---|---|---|---|
| [Value] | [Value] | [Value] |
3. Confidence Levels
For each data point or series, flag confidence:
- High confidence: data points where the value is clearly readable against gridlines or labels
- Medium confidence: data points where the value is interpolated between gridlines
- Low confidence: data points where the value is ambiguous or overlaps with other elements
Low-confidence points should be explicitly listed — not silently included in the main table.
4. Notable Observations
Observations that the data itself reveals:
- Peak value: [Value, when, in which series]
- Lowest value: [Value, when, in which series]
- Largest delta between series: [Details]
- Any anomalies or outliers visible in the chart
5. Reconstructed Source
CSV format for direct use:
[x_axis],[series_1],[series_2] [value],[value],[value]
6. Assumptions and Caveats
- Grid resolution: [How precisely values could be read — e.g. "Y-axis has major gridlines every 10 units, minor every 2"]
- Interpolation used: [Any values that required estimating between gridlines]
- Unclear data: [Anything in the chart that could not be read reliably]
- Axis scale: [Linear/logarithmic/etc — note if not obvious]
7. Follow-up Options
Ask the user which of these they want:
- Rebuild the chart in a specified format (Excel formula, Python matplotlib, D3, etc.)
- Produce a narrative description of what the chart shows
- Compare this data against another chart or source
- Flag potentially misleading visual choices in the original (truncated axes, misleading scales, etc.)
Quality Checks
- Every extracted number specifies which series it belongs to
- Confidence levels are explicit for ambiguous points
- Low-confidence values are flagged separately, not silently included
- Assumptions about axis scale and interpolation are stated
- CSV output is clean and directly usable
Example Trigger Phrases
- "Extract the data from this chart"
- "Transcribe the numbers in this graph"
- "Turn this chart image into a spreadsheet"
- "Digitise this chart so I can rebuild it"
- "What are the exact values in this bar chart?"
Why This Works Better on Opus 4.7
Earlier models struggled with pixel-level data transcription from charts, often hallucinating values or misreading gridline positions. Opus 4.7 uses a higher image resolution (2576px vs 1568px) with coordinates mapping 1:1 to pixels, making chart data extraction reliable for practical use.