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Found 5,940 Skills
Apex code quality guardrails for Salesforce development. Enforces bulk-safety rules (no SOQL/DML in loops), sharing model requirements, CRUD/FLS security, SOQL injection prevention, PNB test coverage (Positive / Negative / Bulk), and modern Apex idioms. Use this skill when reviewing or generating Apex classes, trigger handlers, batch jobs, or test classes to catch governor limit risks, security gaps, and quality issues before deployment.
Challenges AI-generated plans, code, designs, and decisions before you commit. Pairs with any other skill as a review layer. Uses pre-mortem analysis, inversion thinking, and Socratic questioning to find what AI missed — blind spots, hidden assumptions, failure modes, and optimistic shortcuts. The skill that asks "are you sure about that?" so you don't have to. Triggers on: "challenge this", "devils advocate", "stress test this plan", "what could go wrong", "poke holes in this", "review this critically", "second opinion on this design", "what am I missing". Use this skill when you need critical review of any AI-generated output, architecture decision, implementation plan, or code before committing to it.
Stack-aware review for local diffs, pull requests, and repository-wide audits. Routes review across shared policy plus language packs for TypeScript frontend, TypeScript backend/Bun, Go, Rust, and Python. Use after implementation, before merge, or when auditing an existing codebase.
Migrate data from Notion, Confluence, Google Drive, Airtable, Marvin, Condens, EnjoyHQ, Productboard, or local files into Dovetail using the dt CLI.
Use when the task involves authentication, user signups, logins, password recovery, OAuth providers, role-based access control, or protecting routes and functions. Always use `@netlify/identity`. Never use `netlify-identity-widget` or `gotrue-js` — they are deprecated.
Adversarial thinking partner for founders and executives. Stress-tests plans, prepares for board meetings, dissects decisions with no good options, forces honest post-mortems, and identifies blind spots before competitors or board members do. Use when you need plan validation, board preparation, hard decision frameworks, assumption stress-testing, failure analysis, or when user mentions stress test, challenge, board prep, hard decision, pre-mortem, post-mortem, devil's advocate, plan review, or executive coaching.
Debug and emulate specific code fragments or functions using the Unicorn engine. Activate when the user wants to emulate a function with Unicorn, trace binary execution without running the full program, decrypt or decode data by emulating the algorithm, or bypass environment dependencies (JNI, syscalls, libc) during emulation.
Inventory all founder resources across 8 categories for a one-person company. Use when Codex needs to systematically confirm what resources the founder has — experience, network, skills, relationships, channels, assets, time/money constraints, hard limits — by first doing a broad scan of each category, then drilling into specifics (distribution, usable portions, how to use, cost of use), and producing a confirmed detailed resource inventory written to `opc-doc/`. Does NOT analyze directions, preferences, suitability, or risk tolerance — those belong to downstream skills.
Set up or update the agent-first engineering harness for any repository. Implements the complete scaffolding that makes AI coding agents effective: knowledge maps (AGENTS.md as a concise TOC), structured documentation, architecture boundaries, enforcement rules (.harness/*.yml specs), quality scoring, and process patterns for agent-driven development. Use this skill whenever someone wants to make a repo agent-ready, set up AGENTS.md or docs/ structure, define domain boundaries or golden principles, generate .harness/ configuration, audit agent readiness, or update an existing harness. Also trigger when a user reports problems with agent effectiveness, context management, or architectural drift — these are symptoms of a missing or stale harness. Trigger on: "harness this repo", "set up harness", "agent-first setup", "make this agent-ready", "update the harness", "assess agent readiness", "set up AGENTS.md", "organize for agents", or any discussion about structuring a codebase for AI agent workflows.
This skill should be used when a user wants to create, draft, or plan a GitHub Epic issue — for example "write an epic", "I want to define a new initiative", "scope out this strategic project", "turn this idea into an epic", "plan work that spans multiple features", or "start from a bounded context". Also use when the user asks to define domain outcomes, capture a large initiative before breaking it into features, or describe work in terms of business goals rather than technical tasks.
Apply vertical (domain-first) codebase architecture to any project. Use this skill whenever a user asks where to put a file, how to structure a codebase, how to organize code by feature or domain, how to refactor a "horizontal" structure (components/, hooks/, utils/, types/), or asks about code colocation, monorepo boundaries, shared code, or module ownership. Also trigger when the user creates a new module and needs to decide where it belongs, or when reviewing a PR that touches file organization. Works for any language or framework (Python, TypeScript, Go, Rust, etc.) — not just React or frontend.
Use this skill when drawing shapes and graphics in Phaser 4. Covers the Graphics game object, lines, rectangles, circles, arcs, polygons, gradients, fill, stroke, and generated textures. Triggers on: Graphics, draw shape, fillRect, lineStyle, polygon, arc.