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Found 236 Skills
Visual UI annotation tool for AI agents. Drop the React toolbar into any app — humans click elements and leave feedback, agents receive structured CSS selectors, bounding boxes, and React component trees to find exact code. Supports MCP watch-loop, platform-specific hooks (Claude Code / Codex / Gemini CLI / OpenCode), webhook delivery, and autonomous self-driving critique with agent-browser.
Sync provider changes from cloned repositories in the providers/ folder. Use when syncing upstream changes from external provider repositories (claude-code, gemini, codex) while preserving local customizations. Includes multi-step workflow: checking for new commits via GitHub CLI, generating diffs, deep analysis, Pal MCP refactor planning, and applying changes incrementally. Never use for opencode provider (created locally, not cloned).
Delegate coding tasks to Codex, Claude Code, or Pi agents via background process. Use when: (1) building/creating new features or apps, (2) reviewing PRs (spawn in temp dir), (3) refactoring large codebases, (4) iterative coding that needs file exploration. NOT for: simple one-liner fixes (just edit), reading code (use read tool), thread-bound ACP harness requests in chat (for example spawn/run Codex or Claude Code in a Discord thread; use sessions_spawn with runtime:"acp"), or any work in ~/clawd workspace (never spawn agents here). Claude Code: use --print --permission-mode bypassPermissions (no PTY). Codex/Pi/OpenCode: pty:true required.
Install, initialize, verify, and troubleshoot RTK (Rust Token Killer) for AI coding agents. Use when you need to reduce shell-command token output, confirm that the correct `rtk` binary is installed, choose between Homebrew, install.sh, or Cargo installation, wire `rtk init` for Claude Code, Codex, Gemini CLI, Cursor, Copilot, Windsurf, Cline, or OpenCode, or use compact wrappers such as `rtk git status`, `rtk read`, `rtk grep`, `rtk test`, `rtk lint`, and `rtk gain`. Triggers on: rtk, rust token killer, token saver cli, rtk init, rtk gain, codex rtk, gemini rtk, opencode rtk, claude hook token reduction.
Meta-skill for understanding and customizing Mindfold Trellis — the all-in-one AI workflow system for 11 AI coding platforms (Claude Code, Cursor, OpenCode, iFlow, Codex, Kilo, Kiro, Gemini CLI, Antigravity, Qoder, CodeBuddy). Documents the original Trellis system design including architecture, commands, hooks, multi-agent pipelines, monorepo support, and task lifecycle hooks. Use when understanding Trellis architecture, customizing workflows, adding commands or agents, troubleshooting issues, or adapting Trellis to specific projects. Modifications should be recorded in a project-local trellis-local skill, not here.
Audit token waste across agent systems (Claude Code, OpenClaw, Hermes, OpenCode). Detect idle burns, model misrouting, and config bloat with dollar savings.
Query AI coding agent usage, costs, and token consumption. Supports Claude Code, Codex CLI, OpenClaw, and OpenCode. Ask about spending, token usage, model costs, session history, API call counts. Actions: check usage, show cost, compare models, list sessions, analyze spending, token breakdown. Time ranges: today, this week, this month, this year, last N days, custom dates.
Decide which CLI worker (Claude, OpenCode, or Gemini) should implement a given task. Routes by task type — large-context to Gemini, mechanical to OpenCode, judgment to Claude. Returns the chosen worker and a short rationale; the caller invokes the worker via scripts/invoke-worker.sh.
Scaffold or audit the memex (vault + AGENTS.md + spec templates + bundled skills) in any repo — an externalized, navigable project memory for agents (Claude Code, Codex, Cursor, OpenCode, etc.). Agent-agnostic. Idempotent — safe to run repeatedly. Use when the user wants to set up, verify, or fix the memex in a project.
Run Codex CLI, Claude Code, OpenCode, or Pi Coding Agent via background process for programmatic control.
Stay current with how OpenCode, OpenAI Codex, and Claude Code implement extensibility features (skills, slash commands, subagents, custom prompts). Use when comparing implementations across AI coding assistants, researching how a specific tool implements a feature, or syncing knowledge about agent extensibility patterns. Triggers include questions like "how does X implement skills?", "compare slash commands across tools", "what's the latest on Claude Code sub-agents?", or requests to understand agent extensibility approaches.
Adapter boundary rules for plugin integrations. Trigger: Changes in plugin scripts/hooks for Claude, OpenCode, Gemini, or Codex.