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Found 8,761 Skills
Turn any CLI tool into a fully typed JavaScript/TypeScript API using cli-to-js
Use when work should span one or more detached tasks but still behave like one job with a single owner context. TaskFlow is the durable flow substrate under authoring layers like Lobster, ACPX, plugins, or plain code. Keep conditional logic in the caller; use TaskFlow for flow identity, child-task linkage, waiting state, revision-checked mutations, and user-facing emergence.
Conduct targeted code exploration on a repository, and document the process of "Asking Questions → Reading Code → Reaching Conclusions" as searchable evidence for direct reuse when similar questions arise next time. There are three types: question (investigate code around a specific problem and provide conclusions), module-overview (organize the structure, boundaries, entry points, and dependencies of a module), spike (conduct lightweight technical exploration of multiple possible directions without making final decisions). Trigger scenarios: When users say "Let's explore first", "How is X implemented in this repository", "Quickly get familiar with this module", "Archive the exploration results". For the distinction from learning / tricks / decisions, refer to the root skill `easysdd`.
Integrate Modellix's unified API for AI image and video generation into applications. Use this skill whenever the user wants to generate images from text, create videos from text or images, edit images, do virtual try-on, or call any Modellix model API. Also trigger when the user mentions Modellix, model-as-a-service for media generation, or needs to work with providers like Qwen, Wan, Seedream, Seedance, Kling, Hailuo, or MiniMax through a unified API.
Review a pull request — check diff, run tests, report findings
Run AI models on Replicate via predictions, webhooks, and streaming.
Acts as a Senior Staff Engineer to enforce high-quality software development standards. Use this skill when the user asks for code implementation, architectural review, debugging, or technical design. It ensures all code is production-ready, typed, and architecturally sound.
Break down a requirement that is "too large to be implemented as a single feature" into a list of sub-features with dependencies and statuses, and place it in the independent `codestable/roadmap/{slug}/` directory — serving as the seed and scheduling basis for subsequent multiple feature processes. Two modes: new (draft a new roadmap from a large requirement), update (refresh an existing roadmap: add items, modify dependencies, reorder, mark as drop). Division of labor with requirements / architecture — those two record "what the system is now", while the roadmap records "what we plan to do next". Trigger scenarios: Users say "I want an X system", "Help me break down this requirement", "Schedule this large requirement", "Create a roadmap", or it is found during the feature-design phase that the requirement is too large to fit into a single feature.
Drive a PR to mergeable state — check CodeRabbit and reviewer comments, address valid ones, reply and resolve invalid ones, fix CI failures (even pre-existing ones from main), push fixes, then loop every 4.5 minutes until two consecutive clean checks. Use after opening a PR when you want it babysitted to green.
Adaptive exploration pipeline that integrates /brainstorm, /think, and /red-team with intelligent pivoting. Unlike /deepthink (which takes a fixed idea and iterates), /prospect starts with divergent brainstorming, picks the most promising vein, runs deep analysis, and — crucially — can PIVOT back to divergent thinking when: the idea dies under red-team, an adjacent opportunity surfaces during analysis, or the research reveals the real opportunity is elsewhere. Produces a prospecting report: the landscape explored, veins assayed, pivots taken, and the final stake with conviction. Use when the user says "prospect", "explore this space", "find opportunities", "what should I build", "explore and analyze", or has a domain/trend they want to both explore AND evaluate.
Help a PhD student intentionally choose which cognitive mode to enter right now (deep production, wide reading, or collaborative engagement) and plan their day around these modes to minimize context-switching costs. Use this skill whenever the user is at the start of a day or work block and unsure what to focus on, feels scattered across too many activities, asks "what should I do right now", wants to plan their day, or feels frustrated by constant context-switching. Trigger on phrases like "plan my day", "what should I work on now", "I feel scattered", "context switching", "deep work", "can't focus", "I have X hours", or whenever the user is trying to decide between substantively different kinds of work (writing vs reading vs meetings).
Craft compelling narratives using story frameworks. Use when the user says "help me with storytelling" or "I want to create a narrative through storytelling"