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Found 3,523 Skills
Systematically identify what's missing in non-fiction writing—both blind spots (inherent limitations) and blank spots (gaps that could be addressed). Use before finalizing non-fiction or when feedback feels incomplete.
This skill should be used ONLY when the user asks to update README.md, CLAUDE.md, AGENTS.md, or CONTRIBUTING.md. Trigger phrases include "update README", "update context files", "init context", "create CLAUDE.md", "update CLAUDE.md", "update AGENTS.md", "update CONTRIBUTING". Do NOT activate this skill for any other Markdown file updates.
Orchestrate agile development workflows for Gitea repositories using the tea CLI. Use when working with Gitea-hosted repos and asking to 'run the workflow', 'continue working', 'what's next', 'complete the task cycle', 'start my day', 'end the sprint', 'implement the next task', or wanting guided step-by-step development assistance. Keywords: workflow, orchestrate, agile, task cycle, sprint, daily, implement, review, PR, standup, retrospective, gitea, tea.
Expert guidance for Swift Testing: test structure, #expect/#require macros, traits and tags, parameterized tests, test plans, parallel execution, async waiting patterns, and XCTest migration. Use when writing new Swift tests, modernizing XCTest suites, debugging flaky tests, or improving test quality and maintainability in Apple-platform or Swift server projects.
This skill should be used when the user asks to "create a pull request", "create PR", "open PR", "update a pull request", "update PR", "create an issue", "file an issue", "create a GitHub issue", "create a Claude Code issue", "report a bug in Claude Code", "create a Codex issue", "report a bug in Codex CLI", "create a Sablier issue", "file an issue in sablier-labs", "create a discussion", "start a GitHub discussion", "yeet a PR", "yeet an issue", "yeet a discussion", or mentions GitHub contribution workflows.
Guide for giving your AI agents capabilities through tools. Helps you identify what your AI needs to do, create tool definitions, and attach them in a way that makes sense for your framework.
Design and generate Convex database schemas with proper validation, indexes, and relationships. Use when creating schema.ts or modifying table definitions.
Discover and use convex-helpers utilities for relationships, filtering, sessions, custom functions, and more. Use when you need pre-built Convex patterns.
Build applications with InsForge Backend-as-a-Service. Use when developers need to: (1) Set up backend infrastructure (create tables, storage buckets, deploy functions, configure auth/AI) (2) Integrate InsForge SDK into frontend applications (database CRUD, auth flows, file uploads, AI operations, real-time messaging) (3) Deploy frontend applications to InsForge hosting IMPORTANT: Before any backend work, you MUST have the user's Project URL and API Key. If not provided, ask the user first. Key distinction: Backend configuration uses HTTP API calls to the InsForge project URL. Client integration uses the @insforge/sdk in application code.
Use this skill when integrating a third-party auth provider (Clerk, Auth0, WorkOS, Kinde, Stytch) with InsForge for authentication and RLS. Covers JWT configuration, client setup, database RLS policies, and provider-specific gotchas for each supported integration.
Handle Chainlink CCIP requests including cross-chain token transfers, cross-chain messaging, fund bridging, sender and receiver contract development, message status lookup, route connectivity checks, supported token discovery, and CCT setup. Use this skill whenever the user mentions CCIP, Chainlink cross-chain, cross-chain token bridges on Chainlink, or wants to move tokens or data between blockchains using Chainlink infrastructure, even if they do not say 'CCIP' explicitly.
Guide for setting up LaunchDarkly projects in your codebase. Helps you assess your stack, choose the right approach, and integrate project management that makes sense for your architecture.