| name | web-research |
| description | Use this skill for current, source-backed technical research for docs, RFCs, ADRs, release notes, API usage, benchmarks, comparisons, or ecosystem questions. Best when Exa, Parallel Search, Perplexity, and Context7 MCP tools are available. |
| license | MIT |
| compatibility | Best with MCP servers `exa`, `parallel-search`, `perplexity`, and `context7`. `allowed-tools` is experimental and mainly useful in Claude Code-style runtimes. |
| allowed-tools | ["mcp__exa__*","mcp__parallel-search__*","mcp__perplexity__*","mcp__context7__*"] |
| metadata | {"category":"docs","tags":["research","rfc","docs","exa","perplexity","context7","parallel","mcp"]} |
Use this skill for current technical research with citations.
Tool map
Prefer these MCP tools by name when available:
exa:web_search_exa — first-pass semantic discovery; best for official docs, product pages, release notes, and likely canonical URLs
exa:web_fetch_exa — read chosen URLs as markdown
parallel-search:web_search — run 3-4 distinct query angles in parallel for breadth
parallel-search:web_fetch — fetch full text for URLs found via parallel search
perplexity:perplexity_search — ranked URL discovery when Exa is weak or unavailable
perplexity:perplexity_ask — quick synthesis or cross-check with citations after discovery
context7:resolve-library-id -> context7:query-docs — library/framework/API docs and code examples
For Claude Code permission syntax, the same tools are usually named mcp__server__tool, for example mcp__exa__web_search_exa.
Default loop
- Restate the research goal in one sentence.
- Write 3-5 search angles: official docs, source repo, release notes, comparison, caveats.
- Start with
exa:web_search_exa.
- Use
parallel-search:web_search when one phrasing may miss results.
- Read real pages with
exa:web_fetch_exa or parallel-search:web_fetch; do not rely only on snippets.
- Use
perplexity:perplexity_ask only after reading enough sources to synthesize or cross-check.
- If the question is library-specific, call
context7:resolve-library-id then context7:query-docs.
- Cite every non-obvious claim and mark uncertainty.
Routing rules
- library or API usage -> Context7 first, then web sources for release notes or ecosystem context
- official docs / changelogs / vendor pages -> Exa first
- broad comparisons or ecosystem scans -> Parallel Search first, then fetch
- quick factual cross-check -> Perplexity ask
- code-heavy topic -> add source repo and API docs; prefer implementation over blogs
Minimum evidence standard
- consequential claim -> 1 official source + 1 corroborating source or implementation reference
- freshness-sensitive claim -> include version or date
- disagreement -> show both sides; do not average them away
References
Load only as needed:
references/query-patterns.md
references/tool-failover.md
references/source-quality.md
references/rfc-research-output-template.md