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Found 2,443 Skills
Detects common LLM coding agent artifacts by spawning 4 parallel subagents
Use when you need framework-agnostic WireMock guidance — stub design, JSON or programmatic mappings, precise request matching, response bodies and faults, classpath fixtures, isolation and reset between tests, verification of calls, dynamic ports and base URLs, and avoiding flaky stubs — without choosing Spring Boot, Quarkus, or Micronaut. Part of the skills-for-java project
Query, list, and create entries in Notion databases. Use when the user wants to query tasks, projects, or any structured data in Notion. Also use for listing all databases in the workspace.
Ingest OpenClaw agent history into the Obsidian wiki. Use this skill when the user wants to mine their past OpenClaw sessions for knowledge, import their ~/.openclaw folder, extract insights from previous OpenClaw conversations, or says things like "process my OpenClaw history", "add my OpenClaw sessions to the wiki", "ingest ~/.openclaw", or "what have I worked on in OpenClaw". Also triggers when the user mentions OpenClaw session logs, MEMORY.md, daily notes, or ~/.openclaw/workspace.
Guides a consultant in designing and activating a niche community strategy for a client — covering Facebook Groups, WhatsApp Communities, LinkedIn Groups, and private forums that serve the brand's audience rather than broadcasting at them. Invoke this skill when a client wants to build a owned community space, shift from page-based broadcasting to community-centred engagement, improve customer retention through belonging, or generate leads through trust networks.
When the user wants to optimize delivery routes, solve vehicle routing problems, or minimize transportation costs. Also use when the user mentions "route planning," "delivery optimization," "VRP," "TSP," "multi-stop routing," "route sequencing," or "dispatch optimization." For fleet sizing and management, see fleet-management. For last-mile specific challenges, see last-mile-delivery.
Generate ReactFlow diagrams as .rfd.json files using a predefined library of custom node types, edge presets, and layout templates. Use when the user wants to visualize architectures, workflows, data flows, or concepts, or wants to convert analysis of a codebase into a diagram viewable in a ReactFlow-based SPA.
**Opt-in DSL path** for NocoBase app building. Use ONLY when the user explicitly asks for YAML / DSL / committed-to-git / `cli push` / spec files — e.g. "use the DSL reconciler", "I want YAML I can commit", "build this as a workspaces/ project". For any other UI authoring request (new page, new block, tweak an existing screen), default to `nocobase-ui-builder` instead — this reconciler is still in active development and has rough edges that the live-UI path avoids. When the user opts in: produces/changes files under `workspaces/<project>/`, supports new pages, menus, modules, whole systems, collections, tables, sub-tables, popups, dashboards, approval workflows, recordActions, and deploys them via `cli push`.
Create, manage, and deploy Power BI semantic models inside Microsoft Fabric workspaces via `az rest` CLI against Fabric and Power BI REST APIs. Use when the user wants to: (1) create a semantic model from TMDL definition files, (2) retrieve or download semantic model definitions, (3) update a semantic model definition with modified TMDL, (4) trigger or manage dataset refresh operations, (5) configure data sources, parameters, or permissions, (6) deploy semantic models between pipeline stages. Covers Fabric Items API (CRUD) and Power BI Datasets API (refresh, data sources, permissions). For read-only DAX queries, use `powerbi-consumption-cli`. For fine-grained modeling changes, route to `powerbi-modeling-mcp`. Triggers: "create semantic model", "upload TMDL", "download semantic model TMDL", "refresh dataset", "semantic model deployment pipeline", "dataset permissions", "list dataset users", "semantic model authoring".
Registers state-type triggers that automatically fire functions when key-value state is created, updated, or deleted within a scope. Use when building reactive side effects, change watchers, audit logs, cache invalidation, notification dispatchers, or any observer pattern where data changes should trigger downstream processing.
Use this skill whenever the user wants browser-based end-to-end tests for an Adobe App Builder application. Covers Playwright E2E testing for ExC Shell SPAs, AEM extension UIs, and full-stack flows. Use when the user mentions: "E2E test", "end-to-end test", "Playwright", "browser test", "test my SPA in the browser", "test my AEM extension", "test the full flow", "integration test with UI", "headless browser test", "E2E in CI". This skill is for BROWSER-based testing only. For Jest unit tests of actions or React components, use appbuilder-testing instead.
Architecture audit that maps module dependencies, checks layering integrity, and flags structural decay across a codebase, drawing on twelve classic engineering books. Triggers when: user asks to audit architecture, review folder/module structure, check for circular imports, understand how the codebase is organized, or asks "does this follow clean architecture?", "why does everything depend on everything?", "are our layers correct?", "where should this code live?". Also triggers for onboarding requests: "explain this codebase to a new developer" or "give me a codebase tour" (use onboarding mode). Also triggers when user mentions: dependency inversion / hexagonal architecture / bounded contexts / circular imports / tangled dependencies / module coupling / package structure / spaghetti code / directory layout. Use this skill proactively when project structure, module boundaries, or architectural decisions are discussed — even without the word "audit". Do NOT trigger for: PR-level code review (use brooks-review) or line-level refactoring questions — this skill analyzes structural/module-level concerns, not individual functions.