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Found 1,090 Skills
Generate REST API endpoints with proper structure, validation, error handling, and types. Use when creating new API routes, endpoints, or backend services.
Retrieve Data Lake Object (DLO) and Data Model Object (DMO) schema information from Salesforce Data Cloud using REST APIs. Use this skill when you need to inspect DLO or DMO field definitions, data types, or metadata. Takes org alias and optional DLO/DMO name as parameters.
Edit existing video on RunComfy — this skill is a smart router that matches the user's intent to the right edit model in the RunComfy catalog. Picks Wan 2.7 Edit-Video (general restyle / background swap / packaging swap, identity + motion preservation), Kling 2.6 Pro Motion Control (transfer precise motion from a reference video to a target character), or Lucy Edit Restyle (lightweight identity-stable restyle / outfit swap). Bundles each model's documented prompting patterns so the skill gets sharper edits without burning iterations on the wrong model. Calls `runcomfy run <vendor>/<model>/<endpoint>` through the local RunComfy CLI. Triggers on "video edit", "edit video", "restyle video", "swap video background", "motion control", "outfit swap video", or any explicit ask to transform a video.
Use when users ask to discover, install, list, check, update, remove, back up, restore, sync, or initialize Agent Skills, mention `bunx skills`, `npx skills`, `skills.sh`, or `skills-lock.json`, ask "find a skill for X", or want help extending agent capabilities with installable skills.
Generate and edit images on RunComfy via the `runcomfy` CLI — a smart router across the full image-model catalog: FLUX 2 (Klein 9B/4B, Pro, Dev, Flash, Turbo, Max), Google Nano Banana 2 / Pro, OpenAI GPT Image 2, ByteDance Seedream 5 / 4-5 / 4-0 and Dreamina 4-0, Alibaba Qwen Image and Z-Image Turbo, Wan 2-7. Covers both text-to-image (t2i) and image-to-image / edit (i2i) endpoints — the skill picks the right model for the user's actual intent (typography precision, photoreal portraits, sub-second iteration, multi-reference brand styling, open-weights workflow) and ships each model's documented prompting patterns plus the minimal `runcomfy run` invoke. Triggers on "generate image", "make a picture", "text to image", "AI image", "make an image of …", "image to image", "i2i", or any explicit ask to create or restyle an image.
Region edits across video frames on RunComfy via the `runcomfy` CLI — remove an object that appears across many frames, clean up wires or watermarks, replace a region with matching motion. Routes across Wan 2-7 edit-video (default, prompt-driven region edits with spatial language), Lucy Edit Restyle (identity-stable region-aware restyle), and Seedream 4-0 edit-sequential (when treating the clip as a frame stack). Picks the right route based on whether the change is prose-driven, identity-locked, or needs frame-by-frame still inpaint chained into a video. Triggers on "video inpaint", "video inpainting", "remove from video", "mask region in video", "clean up video", "remove object from clip", "video patch", "frame-by-frame edit", "remove watermark from video", "remove passing person", or any explicit ask to edit a region across video frames.
Use this skill any time a spreadsheet file is the primary input or output. This means any task where the user wants to: open, read, edit, or fix an existing .xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, or .tsv file (e.g., adding columns, computing formulas, formatting, charting, cleaning messy data); create a new spreadsheet from scratch or from other data sources; or convert between tabular file formats. Trigger especially when the user references a spreadsheet file by name or path — even casually (like "the xlsx in my downloads") — and wants something done to it or produced from it. Also trigger for cleaning or restructuring messy tabular data files (malformed rows, misplaced headers, junk data) into proper spreadsheets. The deliverable must be a spreadsheet file. Do NOT trigger when the primary deliverable is a Word document, HTML report, standalone Python script, database pipeline, or Google Sheets API integration, even if tabular data is involved.
When the user wants to plan, map, or restructure their website's page hierarchy, navigation, URL structure, or internal linking. Also use when the user mentions "sitemap," "site map," "visual sitemap," "site structure," "page hierarchy," "information architecture," "IA," "navigation design," "URL structure," "breadcrumbs," "internal linking strategy," or "website planning." NOT for XML sitemaps (that's technical SEO — see seo-audit). For SEO audits, see seo-audit. For structured data, see schema-markup.
Generate brand-quality product images via mode-specific prompt enhancement on Higgsfield's gpt_image_2 model. The single entry point for any professional brand visual involving a product. Use when: "make a product photo", "studio shot", "lifestyle photo", "in use", "Pinterest pin", "hero banner", "website header", "carousel", "Meta ads", "ad creatives", "model wearing", "virtual try-on", "person holding product", "closeup with hands", "levitating product", "floating", "splash shot", "CGI style", "surreal product", "restyle", "Christmas version", "in [aesthetic] style", or any request involving a product, brand, or paid social creative. Modes: product_shot, lifestyle_scene, closeup_product_with_person, pinterest_pin, hero_banner, social_carousel, ad_creative_pack, virtual_model_tryout, conceptual_product, restyle. Backend assembles the final prompt — never write gpt_image_2 prompts freehand. Always go through this skill. NOT for: raw text-to-image with no brand/product (use higgsfield-generate), branded marketing video with avatars (use higgsfield-generate's Marketing Studio), Soul Character training (use higgsfield-soul-id).
Build production-ready Node.js backend services with Express/Fastify, implementing middleware patterns, error handling, authentication, database integration, and API design best practices. Use when creating Node.js servers, REST APIs, GraphQL backends, or microservices architectures.
Provides a guide for setting up Golang project layouts and workspaces. Use this whenever starting a new Go project, organizing an existing codebase, setting up a monorepo with multiple packages, creating CLI tools with multiple main packages, or deciding on directory structure. Apply this for any Go project initialization or restructuring work.
Brand-first landing page designer — interviews the user to discover brand identity (adjectives, colors, typography, shape language), then generates and iterates on a polished landing page via Stitch with deployment-ready HTML output. Preferred over frontend-design for standalone landing/marketing pages where the user hasn't established visual direction yet. TRIGGER when: user asks to "create/design/build a landing page", "make a homepage for my project/product/service", "build a marketing page", or wants to promote an app/side project. Especially when they haven't defined brand colors, fonts, or visual style — the guided brand interview is the core value. DO NOT TRIGGER when: user has a specific design mockup to implement, wants a dashboard or app UI, needs component-level frontend work (buttons, forms, navbars), is building a multi-page application, or is restyling an existing page with known design tokens. Use frontend-design for those cases.