بنقرة واحدة
cc-thingz
يحتوي cc-thingz على 114 من skills المجمعة من alexei-led، مع تغطية مهنية على مستوى المستودع وصفحات skill داخل الموقع.
Skills في هذا المستودع
Support-only Playwright runtime/reference for browser-automation — dev-server detection, a Node.js script runner, quiet screenshot helpers, SPA readiness helpers, and custom HTTP headers. Use when browser-automation selects the bundled Playwright fallback; do not route user intent here directly.
Support-only Playwright runtime/reference for browser-automation — dev-server detection, a Node.js script runner, quiet screenshot helpers, SPA readiness helpers, and custom HTTP headers. Use when browser-automation selects the bundled Playwright fallback; do not route user intent here directly.
Support-only Playwright runtime/reference for browser-automation — dev-server detection, a Node.js script runner, quiet screenshot helpers, SPA readiness helpers, and custom HTTP headers. Use when browser-automation selects the bundled Playwright fallback; do not route user intent here directly.
Support-only Playwright runtime/reference for browser-automation — dev-server detection, a Node.js script runner, quiet screenshot helpers, SPA readiness helpers, and custom HTTP headers. Use when browser-automation selects the bundled Playwright fallback; do not route user intent here directly.
Batch behavior-preserving refactors for multi-file, repeated-pattern, large-file, rename, move, extract, split, or restructure work. Use for "refactor across files", "batch rename", "update pattern everywhere", large files (500+ lines), or 5+ coordinated edits in one file. NOT for single targeted edits, behavior changes or bug fixes (use fixing-code), test-only refactors (use improving-tests), code review (use reviewing-code), or architecture redesign (use architecture-design/review).
Use when reviewing changed code, PRs, diffs, or specific files. Finds evidence-backed defects in security, correctness, tests, reliability, performance, maintainability, and docs. Supports quick, standard, deep, team, and external-review modes. NOT for repo-wide architecture review, general codebase exploration, fixing issues (use fixing-code), improving tests without a code review (use improving-tests), or applying refactors (use refactoring-code).
Brainstorm ideas and stress-test draft plans before coding. Use when brainstorming, exploring approaches, designing a feature/API/flow, grilling or debating a bounded plan, challenging assumptions, or resolving design-blocking terminology. NOT for implementation task breakdown. NOT for generic technology comparisons or best-practice research; use researching-web. NOT for docs updates; use documenting-code.
Audit and improve AI coding-agent configuration. Use when reviewing or changing Claude Code, Pi, Codex, skill, agent, hook, MCP, permission, package, or generated-export setup. Default is review-only; fixes require explicit user approval or --fix. NOT for score-only instruction review or prompt lint; use reviewing-instructions. NOT for application config, git hygiene, code bugs, ordinary docs, or generated files without their source.
Find exact, version-correct library/API/framework docs through one lookup workflow. Use when the user says "look up docs", "how to use", "API for", "syntax for", "examples of", "show me the docs", mentions "ctx7"/"Context7", passes a `/org/project` library ID, or needs API signatures, config keys, syntax, examples, or versioned docs. NOT for comparisons, current-state or release-behavior questions, best-practice surveys, or recent ecosystem news — use researching-web.
Use when asked to lint, audit, review, or score AI-facing instruction files such as SKILL.md, AGENT.md, AGENTS.md, CLAUDE.md, platform body.md files, prompt files, rules, policies, and agent-facing references. NOT for plugin manifests, application code review, harness configuration review, ordinary docs, tests, or generated build output.
Structured stepwise reasoning with explicit revisions and branches. Use when the user says "think step by step", "sequential thinking", "plan this out", "reason through this", "branch this idea", or when tackling a hard multi-step problem (architecture decisions, ambiguous bugs, multi-constraint tradeoffs, plans that may need revision). NOT for trivial lookups, single-tool fetches, or tasks the model can answer directly without planning. NOT for open-ended option exploration or idea generation; use brainstorming-ideas. NOT for arguing a claim from both sides to prove or disprove it.
Idiomatic C# /.NET development. Use when writing C# code, changing `.csproj` or `.sln`, or working on ASP.NET Core apps, libraries, CLIs, workers, and xUnit/NUnit/MSTest suites. Emphasizes nullable references, async/await, LINQ discipline, boundary validation, focused `dotnet` feedback, and minimal dependencies. NOT for Go, Python, TypeScript, shell scripts, or infra-only work.
Idiomatic Go development. Use when writing Go code, designing APIs, reviewing Go implementations, or changing Go tests. Follow the module's target Go version. Prefer stdlib, concrete types, explicit errors, context propagation, fast feedback, and behavior tests. NOT for Python, Rust, TypeScript, shell scripts, or infra-only work.
Idiomatic modern Java and Kotlin JVM development. Use when writing `.java`, `.kt`, or `.kts` code; changing Gradle or Maven builds; or working on Spring, Micronaut, Quarkus, Ktor, Android JVM modules, JUnit, Mockito, Kotest, ktlint, detekt, or JVM CLI/services. Emphasizes JDK toolchains, null-safety, fast focused Gradle/Maven feedback, deterministic formatting, and minimal dependencies. NOT for JavaScript/TypeScript, C#/.NET, Python, shell scripts, or infra-only work.
Idiomatic Python 3.12+ development. Use when writing Python code, CLI tools, scripts, or services. Emphasizes stdlib, type hints, fast pytest feedback, uv/ruff/pyright toolchain, and minimal dependencies. NOT for Go, Rust, TypeScript, or shell-only tasks.
Idiomatic Rust development. Use when writing Rust code, Cargo crates/workspaces, Rust tests, or rustfmt/clippy/cargo workflows. Emphasizes ownership, Result errors, small APIs, stdlib-first dependencies, fast cargo feedback, and behavior tests. NOT for Go, Python, TypeScript, shell scripts, or infra-only work.
Idiomatic shell development for POSIX sh, Bash, Zsh, Fish, hooks, CI shell steps, and scriptable CLI glue. Use when writing or changing `.sh`, `.bash`, `.zsh`, `.fish`, `.bats`, shell functions, shell pipelines, CI `run:` shell bodies, or command-runner recipes. Emphasizes portability, quoting, safe filesystem/process handling, non-TUI CLI tools, ShellCheck, shfmt, Bats, and ShellSpec. NOT for Python, Rust, TypeScript, Go, web code, or GitHub Actions workflow/job/permissions semantics; use operating-infra.
Idiomatic TypeScript development. Use when writing TypeScript code, Node.js services, React apps, or TypeScript design advice. Emphasizes strict typing, boundary validation, composition, fast feedback, behavior tests, and project-configured tooling. NOT for Go, Python, Rust, plain HTML/CSS/JS, or server-rendered templates (use writing-web).
Simple web development with HTML, CSS, JS, and HTMX. Use when working with .html, .css, or .htmx files, web templates, stylesheets, or vanilla JS scripts. NOT for React/Vue/Angular (use writing-typescript) or Node.js backends.
Use when planning, executing, checkpointing, finishing, or inspecting lightweight spec-driven work. Runs one task at a time using `.spec/` markdown files and the bundled `specctl` helper. NOT for broad product discovery beyond a short requirement interview. NOT for generic implementation planning that does not read or write `.spec/` files.
Browser automation for rendered UI exploration, validation, screenshots, recordings, and end-to-end flows. Use when a task needs an actual browser or rendered DOM: inspect UI state, click/fill forms, debug frontend behavior, capture evidence, verify a feature, or run/generate browser tests. NOT for API checks or pure logic tests where curl, unit tests, or JSDOM is cheaper.
Create normal git commits with logical grouping. Use when committing, saving changes, creating commits, or grouping work into commits. NOT for amending, rebasing, force-pushing, or rewriting history.
Create or update human-facing docs, agent-facing instructions, architecture docs, API docs, README content, and useful code comments from implementation facts. Use when docs are stale, missing, or must reflect code changes. NOT for code-quality review, prompt scoring, speculative docs, or ADRs unless explicitly requested.
Fix code defects with a reproducible feedback loop, root-cause diagnosis, minimal patch, regression test, and clean verification. Use when debugging, diagnosing, or resolving lint/test/build failures. NOT for behavior-preserving refactors (use refactoring-code), test-suite cleanup without a production bug (use improving-tests), or code review findings without fixes (use reviewing-code).
Improve test design, speed, and coverage with behavior-focused tests, useful seams, characterization tests, TDD, and test refactoring. Use when improving tests, optimizing slow suites, adding coverage, refactoring brittle tests, removing test waste, or working test-first. NOT for fixing production bugs (use fixing-code), production-code refactors (use refactoring-code), or reviewing non-test code quality (use reviewing-code).
Batch behavior-preserving refactors for multi-file, repeated-pattern, large-file, rename, move, extract, split, or restructure work. Use for "refactor across files", "batch rename", "update pattern everywhere", large files (500+ lines), or 5+ coordinated edits in one file. NOT for single targeted edits, behavior changes or bug fixes (use fixing-code), test-only refactors (use improving-tests), code review (use reviewing-code), or architecture redesign (use architecture-design/review).
Use when reviewing changed code, PRs, diffs, or specific files. Finds evidence-backed defects in security, correctness, tests, reliability, performance, maintainability, and docs. Supports quick, standard, deep, team, and external-review modes. NOT for repo-wide architecture review, general codebase exploration, fixing issues (use fixing-code), improving tests without a code review (use improving-tests), or applying refactors (use refactoring-code).
Brainstorm ideas and stress-test draft plans before coding. Use when brainstorming, exploring approaches, designing a feature/API/flow, grilling or debating a bounded plan, challenging assumptions, or resolving design-blocking terminology. NOT for implementation task breakdown. NOT for generic technology comparisons or best-practice research; use researching-web. NOT for docs updates; use documenting-code.
Audit and improve AI coding-agent configuration. Use when reviewing or changing Claude Code, Pi, Codex, skill, agent, hook, MCP, permission, package, or generated-export setup. Default is review-only; fixes require explicit user approval or --fix. NOT for score-only instruction review or prompt lint; use reviewing-instructions. NOT for application config, git hygiene, code bugs, ordinary docs, or generated files without their source.
Find exact, version-correct library/API/framework docs through one lookup workflow. Use when the user says "look up docs", "how to use", "API for", "syntax for", "examples of", "show me the docs", mentions "ctx7"/"Context7", passes a `/org/project` library ID, or needs API signatures, config keys, syntax, examples, or versioned docs. NOT for comparisons, current-state or release-behavior questions, best-practice surveys, or recent ecosystem news — use researching-web.
Web research via platform web tools. Use for technical comparisons, current-state and release-behavior questions, recent facts, ecosystem news, best practices, standards, or questions needing grounded web evidence. NOT for exact API syntax, config keys, or code examples — use looking-up-docs for those. NOT for repo-specific questions — search local files first.
Use when asked to lint, audit, review, or score AI-facing instruction files such as SKILL.md, AGENT.md, AGENTS.md, CLAUDE.md, platform body.md files, prompt files, rules, policies, and agent-facing references. NOT for plugin manifests, application code review, harness configuration review, ordinary docs, tests, or generated build output.
Structured stepwise reasoning with explicit revisions and branches. Use when the user says "think step by step", "sequential thinking", "plan this out", "reason through this", "branch this idea", or when tackling a hard multi-step problem (architecture decisions, ambiguous bugs, multi-constraint tradeoffs, plans that may need revision). NOT for trivial lookups, single-tool fetches, or tasks the model can answer directly without planning. NOT for open-ended option exploration or idea generation; use brainstorming-ideas. NOT for arguing a claim from both sides to prove or disprove it.
Create, split, slim, or rewrite repository skills. Use when adding a new `src/skills/<name>/` skill, editing a skill description, frontmatter, references, overlays, or plugin placement, or tightening routing between neighboring skills. NOT for score-only instruction review; use reviewing-instructions. NOT for broad agent/package config audits; use evolving-config. NOT for ordinary docs; use documenting-code.
Remove merged local branches and stale git worktrees. Use when the user says "cleanup branches", "prune worktrees", "tidy git", "remove merged branches", "delete merged branches", "gone branches", or wants to clean local git state. NOT for creating commits, creating worktrees, or configuring git hooks.
Configure safe git workflow hygiene: pre-commit/pre-push hooks, Gitleaks secret scanning, .gitignore rules, local git config, and guardrails. Use when setting up git hooks, gitleaks/git leaks, staged pre-commit checks, pre-push validation, core.hooksPath, .gitignore, or git config best practices. NOT for creating commits (use committing-code), cleaning branches/worktrees (use cleanup-git), or creating worktrees (use using-git-worktrees).
Creates isolated git worktrees for parallel development. Use when starting feature work needing isolation or working on multiple branches simultaneously. NOT for simple branch switching, bulk branch cleanup (use cleanup-git), or git hook/config setup (use configuring-git-hygiene).
Author, inspect, troubleshoot, and review infrastructure across IaC, Kubernetes, cloud resources, containers, CI/CD, and Linux hosts. Use when changing Terraform/OpenTofu, Kubernetes, Helm, Kustomize, Dockerfiles, GitHub Actions workflow/job/permissions semantics, AWS, GCP, Cloud Run, BigQuery, IAM, logs, instances, or service health. NOT for deploy/apply/rollback workflows (see deploying-infra). NOT for shell scripts, generic command pipelines, or only the shell body inside `run:` steps (see writing-shell).
Idiomatic C# /.NET development. Use when writing C# code, changing `.csproj` or `.sln`, or working on ASP.NET Core apps, libraries, CLIs, workers, and xUnit/NUnit/MSTest suites. Emphasizes nullable references, async/await, LINQ discipline, boundary validation, focused `dotnet` feedback, and minimal dependencies. NOT for Go, Python, TypeScript, shell scripts, or infra-only work.
Idiomatic Go development. Use when writing Go code, designing APIs, reviewing Go implementations, or changing Go tests. Follow the module's target Go version. Prefer stdlib, concrete types, explicit errors, context propagation, fast feedback, and behavior tests. NOT for Python, Rust, TypeScript, shell scripts, or infra-only work.