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Found 175 Skills
Generate and review Java code using patterns and best practices from Joshua Bloch's "Effective Java" (3rd Edition). Use this skill whenever the user asks about Java best practices, API design, object creation patterns, generics, enums, lambdas, streams, concurrency, serialization, method design, exception handling, or writing clean, maintainable Java code. Trigger on phrases like "Effective Java", "Java best practices", "builder pattern", "static factory", "defensive copy", "immutable class", "enum type", "generics", "bounded wildcard", "PECS", "stream pipeline", "optional", "thread safety", "serialization proxy", "checked exception", "try-with-resources", "composition over inheritance", "method reference", "functional interface", or "Java API design."
Expert iOS development skill covering SwiftUI, UIKit, Core Data, App Store guidelines, and performance optimization. Use this skill when building, reviewing, or debugging iOS apps - views, navigation, data persistence, animations, or submission preparation. Triggers on SwiftUI layout and state management, UIKit view controller lifecycle, Core Data model design and migrations, App Store Review Guidelines compliance, memory and rendering performance profiling, and Swift concurrency patterns for iOS.
Go concurrency patterns and primitives: goroutines, channels, sync primitives, worker pools, rate limiting, context propagation. Use when writing concurrent Go code, implementing worker pools, fan-out/fan-in pipelines, rate limiters, or debugging race conditions and goroutine leaks. Triggers: goroutine, channel, sync.Mutex, sync.WaitGroup, worker pool, fan-out, fan-in, rate limit, concurrent, parallel, context.Context, race condition, deadlock. Do NOT use for sequential Go code, general Go syntax, error handling patterns, or HTTP routing without concurrency concerns.
Use when you need to design, review, or improve REST APIs with Quarkus REST (Jakarta REST) — including resource classes, HTTP methods, status codes, request/response DTOs, Bean Validation, exception mappers, OpenAPI with SmallRye, content negotiation, pagination, sorting and filtering, API versioning, idempotency (Idempotency-Key), optimistic concurrency (ETag / If-Match), HTTP caching (Cache-Control), API deprecation (Sunset / Deprecation headers), RFC 7807 Problem Details, ISO-8601 for time in contracts, and security-aware boundaries. Part of the skills-for-java project
Use when you need to design, review, or improve REST APIs with Spring Boot — including HTTP methods, resource URIs, status codes, DTOs, versioning, deprecation and sunset headers, content negotiation (JSON and vendor media types), ISO-8601 instants in DTOs, pagination/sorting/filtering, Bean Validation at the boundary, idempotency, ETag concurrency, HTTP caching, error handling, security, API documentation, controller advice, and problem details for errors. Part of the skills-for-java project
Review and implement safe concurrency patterns in Go: goroutines, channels, sync primitives, context propagation, and goroutine lifecycle management. Use when writing concurrent code, reviewing async patterns, checking thread safety, debugging race conditions, or designing producer/consumer pipelines. Trigger examples: "check thread safety", "review goroutines", "race condition", "channel patterns", "sync.Mutex", "context cancellation", "goroutine leak". Do NOT use for general code style (use go-coding-standards) or HTTP handler patterns (use go-api-design).
REST and gRPC API design patterns for Go services. Covers HTTP handlers, middleware, routing, request/response patterns, versioning, pagination, graceful shutdown, and OpenAPI documentation. Use when designing APIs, writing HTTP handlers, implementing middleware, structuring REST endpoints, or setting up gRPC services. Trigger examples: "design API", "REST endpoints", "HTTP handler", "middleware pattern", "graceful shutdown", "gRPC service", "API versioning". Do NOT use for general architecture (use go-architecture-review) or concurrency in handlers (use go-concurrency-review).
Detect performance anti-patterns and apply optimization techniques in Go. Covers allocations, string handling, slice/map preallocation, sync.Pool, benchmarking, and profiling with pprof. Use when checking performance, finding slow code, reducing allocations, profiling, or reviewing hot paths. Trigger examples: "check performance", "find slow code", "reduce allocations", "benchmark this", "profile", "optimize Go code". Do NOT use for concurrency correctness (use go-concurrency-review) or general code style (use go-coding-standards).
Security review for Go applications: input validation, SQL injection, authentication/authorization, secrets management, TLS, OWASP Top 10, and secure coding patterns. Use when performing security reviews, checking for vulnerabilities, hardening Go services, or reviewing auth implementations. Trigger examples: "security review", "check vulnerabilities", "OWASP", "SQL injection", "input validation", "secrets management", "auth review". Do NOT use for dependency CVE scanning (use go-dependency-audit) or concurrency safety (use go-concurrency-review).
Go coding standards and style conventions grounded in Effective Go, Go Code Review Comments, and production-proven idioms. Use when writing or reviewing Go code, enforcing naming conventions, import ordering, variable declarations, struct initialization, or formatting rules. Trigger examples: "check Go style", "fix formatting", "review naming", "Go conventions". Do NOT use for architecture decisions, concurrency patterns, or performance tuning — use go-architecture-review, go-concurrency-review, or go-performance-review instead.
Advanced Effect-TS patterns for typed errors, dependency injection, concurrency, resource management, schema validation, and streaming. Use when building Effect programs — not simple Effect.succeed/fail questions, but multi-concern tasks like designing service layers with Layer composition, handling typed error hierarchies with tagged errors, managing concurrent fibers with structured concurrency, scoped resource lifecycles, schema-driven API contracts, or integrating Effect with existing Express/Hono/database stacks. Do not use for basic TypeScript or general functional programming questions.
Database specialist for SQL, NoSQL, and vector database modeling, schema design, normalization, indexing, transactions, integrity, concurrency control, backup, capacity planning, data standards, anti-pattern review, and compliance-aware database design. Use for database, schema, ERD, table design, document model, vector index design, RAG retrieval architecture, migration, query tuning, glossary, capacity estimation, backup strategy, database anti-pattern remediation work, and ISO 27001, ISO 27002, or ISO 22301-aware database recommendations.