| name | make-pages-interactive |
| description | Turn a directory of static HTML pages into a live commenting surface. Injects a feedback library, starts a tiny server, and routes user comments into a JSONL inbox that the agent monitors and responds to by editing the pages. Trigger phrases — "make this page interactive", "make these pages interactive", "let me comment on this page", "add feedback to these pages". |
Make Pages Interactive
Turns any folder of HTML files into a place the user can leave inline comments on (text selections, element selections, page-level notes). Comments POST to a local JSONL inbox; you (the agent) Monitor that inbox, edit the HTML in response, append to feedback/history.json, and the page auto-reloads with a walkthrough of what changed.
When to invoke
User says any of:
- "make this page interactive" / "make these pages interactive" → Setup flow
- "add feedback to this page" / "let me comment on this page" → Setup flow
- "set up feedback on " → Setup flow
- "stop the feedback server" / "kill the server" / "shut it down" → Stop flow
- "remove the feedback layer" / "make pages static again" → Removal flow
- "update the make-pages-interactive skill" → Update flow
Setup flow (when user wants to make pages interactive)
- Identify the target directory. Usually the user's current working directory or a folder they named. If ambiguous, ask.
- Inject the feedback tags into every
*.html in that directory:
python ~/.claude/skills/make-pages-interactive/scripts/inject.py <dir>
Add --recursive if the pages live in subfolders. The script is idempotent — safe to re-run. It also creates <dir>/feedback/inbox.jsonl and <dir>/feedback/history.json if missing.
- Pick a port. Default 5050. Before starting, check what's there:
curl -s --max-time 2 http://localhost:5050/info
- JSON with
artifact_dir matching this <dir> → reuse it, skip to step 5.
- JSON with a different
artifact_dir → port is held by another exploration. Either ask the user to free it (lsof -ti:5050 | xargs kill) or use port 5051, 5052, … (try the next port; tell the user the URL).
- No response → port 5050 is free.
- Start the server in the background via Bash with
run_in_background: true:
python ~/.claude/skills/make-pages-interactive/lib/server.py <dir> --port <chosen>
The server auto-shuts-down on parent death or 10 min of idle, so you don't need to manage its lifecycle.
- Tell the user the URL. For example:
http://localhost:5050/index.html (use whatever filename they actually have — index.html, report.html, etc.). If they have multiple pages, list the top-level ones.
- Start a Monitor on the inbox so new comments notify you immediately:
Monitor on path: <dir>/feedback/inbox.jsonl
Do NOT poll — let the Monitor notification arrive.
Responding to a feedback batch
When a new batch arrives in inbox.jsonl:
- Read the entry. Each comment has a stable
cf_id and a selector pointing to the exact element/text the user commented on.
- Edit the relevant HTML files to address each comment. Wrap each modified region with
<span data-cf-change="ch-<short-slug>">…</span> (or add data-cf-change to an existing wrapping element) so the post-reload walkthrough can find the change. One anchor per change.
- Append a new batch object to the end of
<dir>/feedback/history.json (newest = last; the library walks from the end to find the latest batch). Schema:
{
"batch_id": "b-<timestamp-or-slug>",
"timestamp": "<ISO 8601>",
"comments": [ ],
"changes": [
{
"id": "ch-<slug>",
"in_response_to": ["<cf_id from inbox>"],
"anchor": "ch-<slug>",
"title": "short, concrete",
"description": "longer prose (hidden in UI, just for the record)"
}
]
}
- The page polls
history.json, sees the new batch, auto-reloads (scroll position preserved), and offers the user a walkthrough of the changes. The "processing…" banner clears automatically when any in_response_to matches a submitted comment id.
Post in-flight status while you work
When you receive feedback and start working, POST a short status string so the user sees what you're doing instead of just a generic spinner:
POST /status
{"comment_id": "<cf_id from inbox>", "message": "Filing 2 receipts to Google Sheet (~30s)"}
To clear an entry early, POST the same comment_id with message: null or "". Entries are auto-pruned by the server after 10 min so a crashed agent never leaves a stuck "working" message.
history.json remains the source of truth for "done" — the status message is decoration only. The banner clears the moment a matching batch lands in history.json, regardless of whether you cleared the status entry.
On startup in a directory that already has feedback
If you find <dir>/feedback/inbox.jsonl and <dir>/feedback/history.json and the skill has been invoked in this session:
- Scan inbox for comment ids.
- Scan history's
changes[*].in_response_to union — those are already processed.
- If unprocessed comments exist, tell the user the count and ask whether to process now.
- Either way, set up the Monitor on the inbox.
Stop flow (user wants to kill the server)
- Identify the port. If you started the server in this session, you know it. Otherwise check
curl -s http://localhost:5050/info (try 5051, 5052 if 5050 returns nothing or a different artifact).
- Kill it:
lsof -ti:<port> | xargs kill (use kill -9 only if a plain kill doesn't free the port within a few seconds — the server traps SIGTERM and exits cleanly).
- Confirm:
lsof -i :<port> should be silent.
- If you also started a
Monitor on the inbox in this session, it will keep watching the file — that's fine, the file just won't get new entries.
Note: in most cases the user doesn't need to manually stop the server. It auto-shuts-down when (a) the parent process dies (e.g. they close the Claude Code window — within ~5–10 s) or (b) no client requests for 10 min. Manual stop is for the case where they want the port back right now in the same session.
Update flow (user wants the latest lib/)
python ~/.claude/skills/make-pages-interactive/scripts/update.py
Runs git pull --ff-only inside the skill dir. Requires git-clone install (the script tells the user how to re-install if not).
Removal flow (clean static copy)
If the user wants their HTML back to a clean, server-independent state:
python ~/.claude/skills/make-pages-interactive/scripts/inject.py <dir> --remove
Strips both tags from every *.html. Leaves the feedback/ directory alone (delete manually if not wanted).
Files in this skill
~/.claude/skills/make-pages-interactive/
├── SKILL.md # this file (agent-facing)
├── README.md # GitHub-facing docs (human readers)
├── LICENSE
├── lib/
│ ├── feedback.js # client library: selection + commenting + tour
│ ├── feedback.css # styles
│ └── server.py # stdlib-only HTTP server
└── scripts/
├── inject.py # idempotent tag injection / removal
└── update.py # git pull --ff-only
Gotchas
- The injected
<link> and <script> reference absolute paths /lib/feedback.css and /lib/feedback.js. These resolve through server.py, which routes /lib/* to the skill's own lib/ directory. So pages only work when opened through this server — opening the HTML file directly in a browser will silently fail to load the feedback widget (the page itself still renders).
history.json order matters: append (don't prepend). The library walks from the end to find the latest batch for the walkthrough.
anchor values must match a data-cf-change attribute actually present in the HTML. Typos here cause "anchor not found" warnings post-reload.