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Found 3,526 Skills
Query the DatoCMS Content Delivery API (CDA) — the read-only GraphQL API — using @datocms/cda-client. Use when users ask for GraphQL content reads: fetching posts/pages/projects, filtering by date/text/fields, sorting/order, pagination/load-more, text pattern matching via regex filters, localization and fallback locales, modular content fragments, Structured Text (DAST) with blocks/inline records, responsive images (srcset/blur-up/imgix), SEO metadata (_seoMetaTags, favicons, global SEO), video/Mux fields, draft or preview reads, environment-targeted reads, cache tags via rawExecuteQuery, and Content Link metadata for visual editing. Also use for CDA query type generation with gql.tada or GraphQL Code Generator.
Single entry point for one-shot, end-to-end DatoCMS project setup orchestration — the only skill that bundles prerequisites, chains related recipes, and takes a greenfield or partially configured project to a working state in one pass. Covers five setup lanes: (1) frontend foundation (bootstrap a new Next.js/Nuxt/SvelteKit/Astro integration from scratch); (2) frontend features (draft mode, visual editing, web previews, content link, real-time updates, responsive images, SEO, robots/sitemaps, site search, revalidation/cache tags — applied together with their prerequisites); (3) migrations (CLI profiles, baseline migrations, shared histories, release workflow, sandbox reset loops, diff-based generation); (4) onboarding imports (WordPress, Contentful — content plus assets); (5) platform automation (CMA scripting patterns and project-level automation). Use when the user wants a named outcome scaffolded in full rather than a single file patched, when multiple related features need to land together (e.g. "set up visual editing" implies draft mode + content link + web previews), or when the request is a broad "set up X" that needs routing to the smallest matching recipe bundle.
Build and modify EdgeSpark apps. Use when a project has edgespark.toml, the user mentions EdgeSpark, or work involves the edgespark CLI, server SDK types, storage/auth/database workflows, deployment, or @edgespark/web.
Use when the user wants to create or update a DDD-style ubiquitous language glossary, define domain terms, resolve ambiguous terminology, harden naming, or write UBIQUITOUS_LANGUAGE.md from the current conversation and codebase context.
Draft social media posts to share valuable readings, articles, or resources. Use when user wants to share a link, article, or reading on social media (X/Twitter, Substack, 知识星球), or mentions "分享这篇文章", "share this article", "write a post about this", "推荐一下这个", or provides a URL and asks to write sharing content.
Interview the user relentlessly to expand context and surface intent, constraints, hidden assumptions, and unstated alternatives. Use whenever the user invokes `/grill-me`, says "grill me", "interview me", "pressure-test this", "help me think through", or whenever the user's first message is more decision than task — across coding, business, marketing, personal branding, SOPs, systems thinking, process design, and tough decisions.
Fills gaps in existing healthcare practitioner lists — adds missing phone numbers, credentials, specialties, contact info, education, reviews, and regulatory data. Triggers: "enrich my provider list", "fill in missing data", "add phone numbers to these doctors", "complete this practitioner database", "enrich CRM export", "fill gaps in my provider data", "supplement this healthcare list". Accepts CSV, Google Sheet URL, or pasted data. Searches for each provider's practice website, extracts missing fields, and enriches with reviews, clinical trials, and accreditation via WSAs. Do NOT use for extracting providers from practice URLs — use healthcare-providers-extract instead. Do NOT use for validating credentials — use healthcare-providers-verify instead. Do NOT use for discovering practices — use market-finder or local-places instead. Do NOT use for general extraction — use nimble-web-expert instead.
Finds qualified candidates for a role by searching LinkedIn, Indeed, GitHub, and other professional platforms using Nimble Web Search Agents. Accepts a job description, role title, or freeform request and returns a ranked candidate list with profiles, skills, and contact signals. Use this skill when the user wants to find, source, or recruit candidates for a role. Common triggers: "find candidates for", "source engineers in", "who can I hire for", "find me a [role]", "recruiting for", "talent search", "find a [role] in [city]", "build a candidate list", "sourcing for [role]", "who's available for", "find potential hires". Also triggers on a pasted job description followed by a sourcing request. Do NOT use for job market research or salary benchmarking — use market-finder instead. Do NOT use for researching a single known person — use company-deep-dive or meeting-prep instead.
Build production RAG systems with semantic chunking, incremental indexing, and filtered retrieval. Use when implementing document ingestion pipelines, vector search with Qdrant, or context-aware retrieval. Covers chunking strategies, change detection, payload indexing, and context expansion. NOT when doing simple similarity search without production requirements.
Subjects every non-trivial decision to a fresh-context adversarial review before it stands. Use when correctness matters more than speed, when working in unfamiliar code, when stakes are high (production, security-sensitive logic, irreversible operations), or any time a confident output would be cheaper to verify now than to debug later.
Router for Wildix x-bees skills. Use when the user wants to work with x-bees chats, channels, conferences, or messaging — reads, sends, lists, summarizes, or fetches conference details.
Describe what an existing SigNoz alert rule does in plain language — the signal it watches, the threshold and evaluation behavior, the notification routing, and a one-line fire-frequency summary so the user knows whether the alert has been active. Make sure to use this skill whenever the user asks "what does this alert do", "explain alert X", "walk me through this rule", "how does my [Y] alert work", "is this alert configured correctly", or otherwise asks for an interpretation of an existing alert's configuration. Static explanation only — for diagnosing a specific firing incident, use `signoz-investigating-alerts`.