Loading...
Loading...
Found 3,914 Skills
Produces a plain-language comparison of advance directives and POLST/MOLST forms, covering legal status, clinician signatures, emergency precedence, clinical appropriateness, and document coordination. Use when the user asks about advance directive vs. POLST, living will vs. DNR, which document EMS follows, POLST vs. MOLST vs. POST, whether a healthy person needs a POLST, or document coordination in elder law, estate planning, or serious illness contexts.
Micronaut framework guardrails, patterns, and best practices for AI-assisted development. Use when working with Micronaut projects, or when the user mentions Micronaut. Provides compile-time DI, HTTP server/client, data access, and cloud-native guidelines.
Build applications with the Yo Protocol SDK (`@yo-protocol/core`) — an ERC-4626 yield vault protocol supporting Ethereum (1), Base (8453), and Arbitrum (42161). Use when writing code that interacts with Yo Protocol vaults: preparing deposit/redeem transactions, checking positions, querying vault snapshots/yield/TVL, or claiming Merkl rewards. Triggers on mentions of Yo Protocol, yoETH, yoUSD, yoBTC, yoEUR, yoGOLD, yoUSDT, yo-protocol/core, YoClient, createYoClient, PreparedTransaction, or ERC-4626 vault interactions via the Yo gateway.
Vercel Marketplace expert guidance — discovering, installing, and building integrations, auto-provisioned environment variables, unified billing, and the vercel integration CLI. Use when consuming third-party services, building custom integrations, or managing marketplace resources on Vercel.
Precision project estimator that turns security audits and code assessments into professional proposals with scope, timeline, pricing, and deliverables. The Osprey accounts for what others overlook. Use when quoting remediation work, estimating project scope, or producing client-ready proposals.
Apply effective software quality consultancy practices. Use when consulting, advising clients, or establishing consultancy workflows.
Browser automation for AI agents. Use when the user needs to interact with websites, navigate pages, fill forms, click buttons, take screenshots, extract data, test web apps, or automate any browser task. Triggers include "open a website", "fill out a form", "click a button", "take a screenshot", "scrape data", "test this web app", "login to a site", or any task requiring programmatic web interaction.
Build Nostr Data Vending Machine (DVM) services and clients using NIP-90. Use when implementing AI/compute service providers (kinds 5000-5999 job requests, 6000-6999 job results, kind 7000 feedback), creating DVM job request clients with payment handling, chaining DVM jobs, handling encrypted DVM params, or publishing NIP-89 service provider discovery events for DVMs.
Scaffolds a production-ready Next.js turborepo with TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, shadcn CLI, Blode UI components from ui.blode.co, blode-icons-react, Biome, Ultracite, and Vercel deployment. Use when creating a new Next.js app, bootstrapping a turborepo, scaffolding a web project, starting a new website, or asking "create a Next.js project."
Native UI integration for Electrobun desktop applications including ApplicationMenu, ContextMenu, system Tray, native dialogs, keyboard shortcuts, and platform-specific UI patterns. This skill covers creating application menus with submenus and accelerators, context menus triggered by right-click, system tray icons with menus, file/folder dialogs, message boxes, notification systems, global keyboard shortcuts, menu item roles, dynamic menu updates, platform-specific menu conventions (macOS menu bar, Windows system menu), drag-and-drop integration, and native theming. Use when implementing application menus, adding system tray functionality, creating context menus, showing file pickers, implementing keyboard shortcuts, displaying notifications or dialogs, or building platform-native UI experiences. Triggers include "menu", "tray icon", "context menu", "file dialog", "shortcuts", "accelerator", "native dialog", "system tray", "notification", "menu bar", or "right-click menu".
Use this skill whenever writing frontend code that talks to a backend for database queries, authentication, file uploads, AI features, real-time messaging, or edge function calls — especially if the project uses InsForge or @insforge/sdk. Trigger on any of these contexts: querying/inserting/updating/deleting database rows from frontend code, adding login/signup/OAuth/password-reset flows, uploading or downloading files to storage, invoking serverless functions, calling AI chat completions or image generation, subscribing to real-time WebSocket channels, or writing RLS policies. If the user asks for these features generically (e.g., "add auth to my React app", "fetch data from my database", "upload files") and you're unsure whether they use InsForge, consult this skill and ask. For backend infrastructure (creating tables via SQL, deploying functions, CLI commands), use insforge-cli instead.
When the user wants to write, rewrite, or improve any kind of marketing copy. This includes page copy (homepage, landing page, sales page, pricing, feature, about), short-form copy (bios, taglines, value propositions, one-liners, elevator pitches), ad copy (social ads, search ads, display ads), and microcopy (CTAs, button text, form labels, notification text). Use when the user says anything like "write copy for," "improve this copy," "rewrite this," "headline help," "CTA copy," "value proposition," "tagline," "bio," "ad copy," "hero section," "above the fold," "this copy is weak," "make this more compelling," "help me describe my product," "write my bio," "social media bio," or "about me." World Code integrated — uses your voice, climax, method, and crossing to write copy that's unmistakably yours. For email copy, see boring-email-sequence. For popup copy, see boring-popup-cro. For line-by-line editing of existing copy, see boring-copy-editing.