Loading...
Loading...
Found 10,525 Skills
Use when starting feature work that needs isolation from current workspace or before executing implementation plans - creates isolated git worktrees with smart directory selection and safety verification
Edit IDA databases. Use when asked to add comments, rename symbols, apply types, create bookmarks, or clean up decompiled code for review.
Use when selecting, installing, configuring, smoke-testing, documenting, or troubleshooting MCP servers for academic search, arXiv, Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex, Crossref, PubMed, Zotero, Overleaf, Google Scholar, paper metadata, or scholarly source tooling.
Adopt Prisma Next into a new project, onto an existing database, or as the first move after a bootstrap tool dropped you into a scaffold. Use for "what can I do with Prisma Next", "what can I do next with Prisma", "where do I start", "what should I do first", "just ran createprisma", "createprisma", "npx createprisma", "npx create-prisma", "first steps", "first query", "I have a scaffolded Prisma Next project what now"; for `pnpm dlx prisma-next init` greenfield setup; and for `prisma-next contract infer` + `db sign` against an existing database. Also covers the connect-write-read first-arc orientation, the day-to-day commands (`contract emit`, `db init`, `db update`, `migration plan`, `migrate`, `db schema`, `db verify`), and routing to `prisma-next-contract` / `prisma-next-queries` / `prisma-next-runtime` for the next move. Flags: --target, --authoring, --schema-path, --probe-db, --output.
Runs the morning maintainer standup for NemoClaw. Triages the backlog, determines the day's target version, labels selected items, surfaces stragglers from previous versions, and outputs the daily plan. Use at the start of the workday. Trigger keywords - morning, standup, start of day, daily plan, what are we shipping today.
After solving a non-trivial problem, detect generalizable learnings and propose skill updates so future interactions benefit automatically. Always active — applies to every interaction.
End-to-end orchestration for non-trivial software feature development. Use this skill whenever the user asks to implement a PR-sized feature, break down a plan, have subagents review a plan, run a plan-review-development-acceptance loop, coordinate multiple review perspectives, produce an acceptance report, or generate an HTML PR summary. Prefer this skill for multi-step code changes even if the user only says "build this feature" and the task is not a tiny one-file edit.
Orchestrate same-repository GitHub issue work from branch setup through local review and PR readiness. Use when the user invokes `/develop-issue #123`, `/develop-issue https://github.com/<owner>/<repo>/issues/123`, or asks to develop exactly one issue end to end.
Use this when the user wants to post a daily X/Twitter tweet inspired by one of their recently published WeChat Official Account articles. It selects the newest article that hasn't been tweeted yet, drafts 3 tweet candidates from it (from different angles — quote / metaphor / one-liner), posts the selected one via xurl, and records the action to history. Triggers — "Post a daily tweet", "Tweet from an article", "Today's tweet", "/wjs-tweeting-from-articles".
Use when the user asks to define a goal, create a Goal Contract, or clarify a concrete task's goal, scope, success criteria, evidence, or guardrails before planning or execution.
Archive completed changes and merge specification differences into permanent documents. Used when changes have been deployed, are ready for archiving, or when specifications need to be updated after implementation. Trigger words include "openspec archive", "archive", "archive proposal", "merge specifications", "complete proposal", "update documents", "finalize specifications", "mark as completed".
Review local code changes organized into logical chapters with Stage CLI, a code review tool that works with any AI agent