一键导入
skill-creator
// Guide for creating effective skills. This skill should be used when users want to create a new skill (or update an existing skill) that extends Claude's capabilities with specialized knowledge, workflows, or tool integrations.
// Guide for creating effective skills. This skill should be used when users want to create a new skill (or update an existing skill) that extends Claude's capabilities with specialized knowledge, workflows, or tool integrations.
Complete development workflow from planning to GitHub PR using PARA methodology and RLM for large codebases. Use when implementing a feature, fixing a bug, refactoring, or taking work from plan to GitHub PR.
Analyze and improve performance: profile, find bottlenecks, optimize, and instrument code with observability for diagnosing performance issues (profiling, bottleneck tracing). Use when the user asks about performance, slow code, bottlenecks, profiling, optimization, or adding performance-specific observability.
Design and implement tests (unit, integration, e2e, accessibility, i18n), improve coverage, and run test suites. Use when the user asks to add tests, write tests, improve coverage, run tests, test accessibility, test translations, or implement test strategy.
Configure and fix CI/CD pipelines: build, test, lint, deploy, database migrations, environment config, observability setup (log shipping, metric collection, alert configuration), and releases. Use when the user asks about CI, pipeline, GitHub Actions, deploy, fix the build, environment variables, monitoring setup, or release process.
Debug failures systematically: reproduce, hypothesize, bisect, and fix. Use when the user reports a bug, asks why something fails, or wants to find the root cause.
Write commit messages, changelogs, release notes, and manage versioning following Conventional Commits with required scope. Use when the user asks for a commit message, changelog, release notes, versioning, tagging, or how to format commits.
| name | skill-creator |
| description | Guide for creating effective skills. This skill should be used when users want to create a new skill (or update an existing skill) that extends Claude's capabilities with specialized knowledge, workflows, or tool integrations. |
| triggers | ["create a skill","new skill","build a skill","skill template"] |
This skill provides guidance for creating effective skills.
Skills are modular, self-contained packages that extend Claude's capabilities by providing specialized knowledge, workflows, and tools. Think of them as "onboarding guides" for specific domains or tasks—they transform Claude from a general-purpose agent into a specialized agent equipped with procedural knowledge that no model can fully possess.
The context window is a public good. Skills share the context window with everything else Claude needs: system prompt, conversation history, other Skills' metadata, and the actual user request.
Default assumption: Claude is already very smart. Only add context Claude doesn't already have. Challenge each piece of information: "Does Claude really need this explanation?" and "Does this paragraph justify its token cost?"
Prefer concise examples over verbose explanations.
Match the level of specificity to the task's fragility and variability:
High freedom (text-based instructions): Use when multiple approaches are valid, decisions depend on context, or heuristics guide the approach.
Medium freedom (pseudocode or scripts with parameters): Use when a preferred pattern exists, some variation is acceptable, or configuration affects behavior.
Low freedom (specific scripts, few parameters): Use when operations are fragile and error-prone, consistency is critical, or a specific sequence must be followed.
Think of Claude as exploring a path: a narrow bridge with cliffs needs specific guardrails (low freedom), while an open field allows many routes (high freedom).
Every skill consists of a required SKILL.md file and optional bundled resources:
skill-name/
├── SKILL.md (required)
│ ├── YAML frontmatter metadata (required)
│ │ ├── name: (required)
│ │ ├── description: (required)
│ │ └── triggers: (recommended)
│ └── Markdown instructions (required)
└── Bundled Resources (optional)
├── scripts/ - Executable code (Python/Bash/etc.)
├── reference/ - Documentation intended to be loaded into context as needed
└── assets/ - Files used in output (templates, icons, fonts, etc.)
Every SKILL.md consists of:
name, description, and triggers fields. name and description are required; triggers is recommended. Claude reads these to determine when the skill gets used, so be clear and comprehensive in describing what the skill is and when it should be used. triggers is a list of commands and phrases that activate the skill (e.g., /command, "natural language phrase").scripts/)Executable code (Python/Bash/etc.) for tasks that require deterministic reliability or are repeatedly rewritten.
scripts/rotate_pdf.py for PDF rotation tasksreference/)Documentation and reference material intended to be loaded as needed into context to inform Claude's process and thinking.
reference/finance.md for financial schemas, reference/mnda.md for company NDA template, reference/policies.md for company policies, reference/api_docs.md for API specificationsassets/)Files not intended to be loaded into context, but rather used within the output Claude produces.
assets/logo.png for brand assets, assets/slides.pptx for PowerPoint templates, assets/frontend-template/ for HTML/React boilerplate, assets/font.ttf for typographyA skill should only contain essential files that directly support its functionality. Do NOT create extraneous documentation or auxiliary files, including:
The skill should only contain the information needed for an AI agent to do the job at hand. It should not contain auxiliary context about the process that went into creating it, setup and testing procedures, user-facing documentation, etc. Creating additional documentation files just adds clutter and confusion.
Skills use a three-level loading system to manage context efficiently:
Key principle: Keep SKILL.md under 500 lines. When a skill supports multiple variations, frameworks, or domains, keep only the core workflow and selection guidance in SKILL.md. Move variant-specific details (patterns, examples, configuration) into separate reference files.
For detailed patterns and examples: See reference/PROGRESSIVE_DISCLOSURE.md, which covers:
Skill creation involves these steps:
Follow these steps in order, skipping only if there is a clear reason why they are not applicable.
Skip this step only when the skill's usage patterns are already clearly understood. It remains valuable even when working with an existing skill.
To create an effective skill, clearly understand concrete examples of how the skill will be used. This understanding can come from either direct user examples or generated examples that are validated with user feedback.
For example, when building an image-editor skill, relevant questions include:
To avoid overwhelming users, avoid asking too many questions in a single message. Start with the most important questions and follow up as needed for better effectiveness.
Conclude this step when there is a clear sense of the functionality the skill should support.
To turn concrete examples into an effective skill, analyze each example by:
Example: When building a pdf-editor skill to handle queries like "Help me rotate this PDF," the analysis shows:
scripts/rotate_pdf.py script would be helpful to store in the skillExample: When designing a frontend-webapp-builder skill for queries like "Build me a todo app" or "Build me a dashboard to track my steps," the analysis shows:
assets/hello-world/ template containing the boilerplate HTML/React project files would be helpful to store in the skillExample: When building a big-query skill to handle queries like "How many users have logged in today?" the analysis shows:
reference/schema.md file documenting the table schemas would be helpful to store in the skillTo establish the skill's contents, analyze each concrete example to create a list of the reusable resources to include: scripts, references, and assets.
At this point, it is time to actually create the skill.
Skip this step only if the skill being developed already exists, and iteration or packaging is needed. In this case, continue to the next step.
When creating a new skill from scratch, always run the init_skill.py script. The script conveniently generates a new template skill directory that automatically includes everything a skill requires, making the skill creation process much more efficient and reliable.
Usage:
skills/skill-creator/scripts/init_skill.py <skill-name> --path <output-directory>
The script:
scripts/, reference/, and assets/After initialization, customize or remove the generated SKILL.md and example files as needed.
When editing the (newly-generated or existing) skill, remember that the skill is being created for another instance of Claude to use. Include information that would be beneficial and non-obvious to Claude. Consider what procedural knowledge, domain-specific details, or reusable assets would help another Claude instance execute these tasks more effectively.
Consult these helpful guides based on your skill's needs:
These files contain established best practices for effective skill design.
To begin implementation, start with the reusable resources identified above: scripts/, reference/, and assets/ files. Note that this step may require user input. For example, when implementing a brand-guidelines skill, the user may need to provide brand assets or templates to store in assets/, or documentation to store in reference/.
Added scripts must be tested by actually running them to ensure there are no bugs and that the output matches what is expected. If there are many similar scripts, only a representative sample needs to be tested to ensure confidence that they all work while balancing time to completion.
Any example files and directories not needed for the skill should be deleted. The initialization script creates example files in scripts/, reference/, and assets/ to demonstrate structure, but most skills won't need all of them.
Writing Guidelines: Always use imperative/infinitive form.
Write the YAML frontmatter with name, description, and triggers:
name: The skill namedescription: This is the primary triggering mechanism for your skill, and helps Claude understand when to use the skill.
docx skill: "Comprehensive document creation, editing, and analysis with support for tracked changes, comments, formatting preservation, and text extraction. Use when Claude needs to work with professional documents (.docx files) for: (1) Creating new documents, (2) Modifying or editing content, (3) Working with tracked changes, (4) Adding comments, or any other document tasks"triggers: A list of commands and natural language phrases that activate the skill. Include the primary slash command (e.g., /docx) and common phrases users would say (e.g., "edit document", "create Word file"). Keep triggers specific to avoid overlap with other skills.Do not include any other fields in YAML frontmatter.
Write instructions for using the skill and its bundled resources.
Once development of the skill is complete, it must be packaged into a distributable .skill file that gets shared with the user. The packaging process automatically validates the skill first to ensure it meets all requirements:
skills/skill-creator/scripts/package_skill.py <path/to/skill-folder>
Optional output directory specification:
skills/skill-creator/scripts/package_skill.py <path/to/skill-folder> ./dist
The packaging script will:
Validate the skill automatically, checking:
Package the skill if validation passes, creating a .skill file named after the skill (e.g., my-skill.skill) that includes all files and maintains the proper directory structure for distribution. The .skill file is a zip file with a .skill extension.
If validation fails, the script will report the errors and exit without creating a package. Fix any validation errors and run the packaging command again.
After testing the skill, users may request improvements. Often this happens right after using the skill, with fresh context of how the skill performed.
Iteration workflow:
skills/skill-creator/scripts/init_skill.py (Step 3).name, description, and triggers.skills/skill-creator/scripts/package_skill.py (Step 5).| Situation | Skill to invoke | How |
|---|---|---|
| New skill needs testing | testing skill | Read skills/testing/SKILL.md |
| New skill needs documentation | documentation skill | Read skills/documentation/SKILL.md |
| New skill includes MCP tools | mcp-builder skill | Read skills/mcp-builder/SKILL.md |
| New skill needs code review | code-reviewer skill | Read skills/code-reviewer/SKILL.md |
| Skill scripts need hardening | security-reviewer skill | Read skills/security-reviewer/SKILL.md |