Read, write, debug, and explain Context-Generic Programming (CGP) code in Rust. Use this skill whenever you encounter or are asked to work with CGP โ any code that uses `cgp::prelude::*`, the `#[cgp_component]`, `#[cgp_impl]`, `#[cgp_provider]`, `#[cgp_fn]`, `#[cgp_type]`, `#[cgp_getter]`, `#[cgp_auto_getter]`, `#[cgp_computer]`, `#[cgp_producer]`, or `cgp_namespace!` macros, the `delegate_components!`, `check_components!`, or `delegate_and_check_components!` macros, the `Symbol!`, `Product!`, `Sum!`, or `Path!` type-level macros, the `HasField`/`HasFields` traits or their derives, providers such as `UseContext`/`UseDelegate`/`UseField`/`UseType`, the handler family (`Computer`/`Producer`/`Handler`), or terms like consumer trait, provider trait, provider, wiring, impl-side dependency, or context-generic. Trigger it even when the user does not say "CGP" by name but is clearly working with these constructs, when a Rust trait error mentions `IsProviderFor`/`DelegateComponent`, or when someone wants modular, depe
Apply this skill whenever you are writing explanatory content, documentation, instructional text, analysis, reports, or any substantive prose that will be read by a mixed audience. Use it when the user asks you to "write clearly", "make this readable", "explain this well", or whenever the content is long enough that different readers might approach it differently. Also trigger when the user explicitly asks for a style that works for both skimmers and deep readers, or when converting bullet-heavy AI output into more readable form. Do not use for short conversational replies, single-sentence answers, or creative fiction.