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Found 1,596 Skills
Actionable design system complementing official frontend-design plugin. The plugin provides philosophy; this skill provides executable patterns. Invoke when: - Building web components, pages, or applications - Designing UI that needs to stand out (not generic) - Implementing visual polish and micro-interactions - Choosing typography, color palettes, or spatial layouts CRITICAL: Avoid "AI slop" aesthetics. Make creative, unexpected choices. MANDATORY: Consult Gemini before any frontend work. See also: references/dna-codes.md, references/banned-patterns.md
This skill should be used when the user: - Wants to work on multiple branches simultaneously or in parallel - Needs to start a new feature/task while preserving current work - Asks about git worktree operations (create, remove, list, clean) - Mentions "twig" commands (add, remove, clean, list, init) - Wants to carry or move uncommitted changes to a new branch - Wants to copy/sync changes between branches - Needs to isolate work in a separate directory - Asks about switching context without stashing - Wants to clean up old/merged branches and their worktrees - Says phrases like "new worktree", "create worktree", "branch off", "work on something else", "start new work", "parallel work", "separate workspace", "another branch" Use this skill for ANY worktree-related operation, not just when explicitly asking about twig.
Turborepo monorepo architecture decisions and anti-patterns. Use when: (1) choosing between monorepo vs polyrepo, (2) deciding when to split packages, (3) debugging cache misses, (4) setting package boundaries, (5) avoiding circular dependencies. NOT for CLI syntax (see turbo --help). Focuses on architectural decisions that prevent monorepo sprawl and maintenance nightmares. Triggers: turborepo, monorepo, package boundaries, when to split packages, turbo cache miss, circular dependency, workspace organization, task dependencies.
Provides elevator pitch and verbal brand communication frameworks including Donald Miller's StoryBrand (SB7), Nancy Duarte's Sparkline, Chris Westfall's CLARITY, Andy Raskin's Strategic Narrative, Simon Sinek's Golden Circle, and time-based pitch structures (10s, 30s, 60s). Auto-activates during elevator pitch creation, one-liner development, brand pitch refinement, and verbal communication work. Use when discussing elevator pitches, one-liners, brand intros, verbal pitches, pitch coaching, spoken brand messages, or pitch variations.
Up-to-date Zig programming language patterns for version 0.15.x. Use when writing, reviewing, or debugging Zig code, working with build.zig and build.zig.zon files, or using comptime metaprogramming. Critical for avoiding outdated patterns from training data - especially build system APIs (root_module instead of root_source_file), I/O APIs (buffered writer pattern), container initialization (.empty/.init), allocator selection (DebugAllocator), and removed language features (async/await, usingnamespace).
Review code changes from multiple specialist perspectives in parallel. Use when you want a thorough review of a PR, branch, or set of changes covering security, performance, correctness, edge cases, and ripple effects. Spawns parallel reviewer agents that each focus on a different lens, then synthesizes into a unified review.
Implement and maintain the OKX broker/provider integration for this workspace using okx-api SDK best practices, including auth/signing, spot/margin/futures/options trading, market/account endpoints, rate limiting, websocket subscriptions, and OKX error handling. Use when adding or changing any code under src/providers/okx or when an LLM needs canonical SDK usage patterns derived from .trae/okx-api-llm.txt.
Use when "data pipelines", "ETL", "data warehousing", "data lakes", or asking about "Airflow", "Spark", "dbt", "Snowflake", "BigQuery", "data modeling"
Parallel development with git worktrees and Claude Code agents. Handles Ghostty terminal launching, port allocation, and global registry. Use when creating worktrees, managing parallel development, or launching agents in isolated workspaces.
AI language tutor for learning ANY language through conversation, vocab drills, grammar lessons, flashcards, and immersive practice. Use when the user wants to: learn a new language, practice vocabulary, study grammar, do flashcard drills, translate phrases, practice conversation, prepare for travel, learn slang/idioms, or improve pronunciation. Supports ALL languages including Spanish, French, German, Japanese, Chinese (Mandarin/Cantonese), Korean, Arabic, Hindi, Bengali/Bangla, Portuguese, Russian, Italian, Turkish, Vietnamese, Thai, Swahili, Hebrew, Polish, Dutch, Greek, and 100+ more.
Expert vehicle designer combining industrial design rigor with entertainment artistry. This skill embodies the methodologies of Scott Robertson's "How to Draw" precision, Syd Mead's future industrial aesthetic, and the functional-aesthetic balance demanded by AAA racing games like Gran Turismo, Forza, and sci-fi franchises like Halo and Star Wars. Every vehicle tells a story through its form. A racing car must look fast standing still. A military vehicle must communicate power and protection. A spacecraft must suggest propulsion physics even when none exist. This skill bridges the gap between "cool looking" and "believably functional" - the difference between concept art that ships and concept art that gets rebuilt from scratch. Use when "vehicle design, car design, spaceship design, aircraft design, tank design, mech design, motorcycle design, racing car, futuristic vehicle, sci-fi vehicle, military vehicle, hover vehicle, flying car, starship, fighter jet, boat design, submarine design, cockpit design, vehicle interior, vehicle customization, damage states, vehicle livery, form language, vehicle proportion, wheel design, hard surface vehicle, vehicle modeling reference, vehicle turnaround, vehicle, automotive, industrial-design, concept-art, hard-surface, sci-fi, racing, military, spacecraft, mech, transportation, game-art, form-language" mentioned.
Apply professional typography principles to create readable, hierarchical, and aesthetically refined interfaces. Use when setting type scales, choosing fonts, adjusting spacing, designing text-heavy layouts, or when the user asks about readability, font pairing, line height, measure, or typographic hierarchy.