com um clique
stage-cli
stage-cli contém 9 skills coletadas de ReviewStage, com cobertura ocupacional por repositório e páginas de detalhe dentro do site.
Skills neste repositório
Generate Stage chapters for the current local git branch and open them in a browser for review.
Use when building or reviewing UI components, pages, or layouts to ensure premium, intentional design that never looks vibe coded
Use when CI is failing on a branch and you need to diagnose failures from GitHub, fix them locally with iterative verification, and re-push clean commits.
Use when a pull request has unresolved review comments that need to be addressed, or when asked to fix PR feedback
Use when a PR is open and the user wants to autonomously monitor and fix PR review comments, CI failures, and rebase conflicts on a recurring loop, or when asked to babysit/iterate on a PR
Use when creating a Linear issue from the current coding context, or when the user invokes /linear-issue. Infers team, priority, status, and relationships from conversation context, working directory, and git branch.
Use when reviewing code changes against AGENTS.md implementation quality standards, or when asked to do an implementation quality review
Use when rebasing the current branch onto origin/main, including resolving merge conflicts along the way
Use at any stage — planning, before implementing, or reviewing code that's already written — to surface high-level trade-offs that could significantly simplify the work. Scans two layers in strict priority order. First, user-facing behavior (features, flows, states, settings, notifications, undo, real-time, bulk ops) — cutting a behavior removes the architecture and code behind it. Second, architectural design (queues, caches, background jobs, new packages, new tables, new services, streaming, real-time infra) — cutting an architectural piece removes whole categories of implementation. Stops there; code-level simplification is outside scope. Proactively invoke whenever the scope of a task looks like it could grow, whenever you catch yourself about to add a queue, cache, new package, new table, new service, or behavior that wasn't explicitly requested, or when looking back at a recent diff that feels larger than the task warranted.