- 📁 scripts/
- 📄 SKILL.md
pdf-processing
Use this skill for any task involving PDF files.
Use this skill for any task involving PDF files.
Coordinate multiple Claude Code sessions as a team — lead + teammates with shared task lists, mailbox messaging, and file-lock claiming. Patterns for team sizing, task decomposition, and when to use teams vs sub-agents vs worktrees.
Read CheapClaw watchdog observations and decide whether to inspect logs, fresh a task, ask for user input, or reset the task.
The anti-PUA. Drives AI with wisdom, trust, and inner motivation instead of fear and threats. Activates on: task failed 2+ times, about to give up, suggesting user do it manually, blaming environment unverified, stuck in loops, passive behavior, or user frustration ('try harder', 'figure it out', '换个方法', '为什么还不行'). ALL task types. Not for first failures.
Design the architecture to solve a given task. Propose the solutions to be used to deliver the task following the best practices and standards.
Inspect external prediction model implementations and adapt them to EasyTSF task contracts. Use when the user provides model code, class definitions, forward logic, or config fragments and wants Codex to classify the target task as `sequence_prediction`, `graph_prediction`, or `grid_prediction`, determine the current repository fit, and produce either a direct adaptation plan or a repository extension plan.
Creates structured Taskplane task packets (PROMPT.md, STATUS.md) for autonomous agent execution via the task-orchestrator extension (/orch). Use when asked to "create a task", "create a taskplane task", "stage a task", "prepare a task for execution", "write a PROMPT.md", "set up work for the agent", "queue a task", or whenever the user wants to define work that will be executed autonomously by another agent instance.
Use this skill for task coordination with workgraph (wg). Triggers include "workgraph", "wg", task graphs, multi-step projects, tracking dependencies, coordinating agents, or when you see a .workgraph directory.
Estimate the cost of a task before starting it. Analyzes task complexity, predicts token usage, and compares cost across all Claude models. Use when user says 'estimate cost', 'how much will this cost', 'cost estimate', or '/cost-estimate'.
MANDATORY - INVOKE IMMEDIATELY after completing ANY development task (feature, bug fix, refactor, maintenance). Creates SR-PTD documentation for future skill extraction. This is NOT optional - every task MUST have documentation.
Use when a well-specified task has meaningful design choices and you want to maximize quality by comparing multiple independent attempts. Works for coding, writing, and custom task types. Triggers on "slot-machine", "best-of-N", "pull the lever", "parallel implementations", or when quality matters more than speed and the spec is clear enough for independent work.
OPC — One Person Company. Task pipeline with independent multi-role evaluation. Builds, reviews, analyzes, and brainstorms with 11 specialist agents. Every task ends with evaluation. /opc <task>, /opc -i <task>, /opc <role> [role...]
skill-sample/ ├─ SKILL.md ⭐ Required: skill entry doc (purpose / usage / examples / deps) ├─ manifest.sample.json ⭐ Recommended: machine-readable metadata (index / validation / autofill) ├─ LICENSE.sample ⭐ Recommended: license & scope (open source / restriction / commercial) ├─ scripts/ │ └─ example-run.py ✅ Runnable example script for quick verification ├─ assets/ │ ├─ example-formatting-guide.md 🧩 Output conventions: layout / structure / style │ └─ example-template.tex 🧩 Templates: quickly generate standardized output └─ references/ 🧩 Knowledge base: methods / guides / best practices ├─ example-ref-structure.md 🧩 Structure reference ├─ example-ref-analysis.md 🧩 Analysis reference └─ example-ref-visuals.md 🧩 Visual reference
More Agent Skills specs Anthropic docs: https://agentskills.io/home
├─ ⭐ Required: YAML Frontmatter (must be at top) │ ├─ ⭐ name : unique skill name, follow naming convention │ └─ ⭐ description : include trigger keywords for matching │ ├─ ✅ Optional: Frontmatter extension fields │ ├─ ✅ license : license identifier │ ├─ ✅ compatibility : runtime constraints when needed │ ├─ ✅ metadata : key-value fields (author/version/source_url...) │ └─ 🧩 allowed-tools : tool whitelist (experimental) │ └─ ✅ Recommended: Markdown body (progressive disclosure) ├─ ✅ Overview / Purpose ├─ ✅ When to use ├─ ✅ Step-by-step ├─ ✅ Inputs / Outputs ├─ ✅ Examples ├─ 🧩 Files & References ├─ 🧩 Edge cases ├─ 🧩 Troubleshooting └─ 🧩 Safety notes
Skill files are scattered across GitHub and communities, difficult to search, and hard to evaluate. SkillWink organizes open-source skills into a searchable, filterable library you can directly download and use.
We provide keyword search, version updates, multi-metric ranking (downloads / likes / comments / updates), and open SKILL.md standards. You can also discuss usage and improvements on skill detail pages.
Quick Start:
Import/download skills (.zip/.skill), then place locally:
~/.claude/skills/ (Claude Code)
~/.codex/skills/ (Codex CLI)
One SKILL.md can be reused across tools.
Everything you need to know: what skills are, how they work, how to find/import them, and how to contribute.
A skill is a reusable capability package, usually including SKILL.md (purpose/IO/how-to) and optional scripts/templates/examples.
Think of it as a plugin playbook + resource bundle for AI assistants/toolchains.
Skills use progressive disclosure: load brief metadata first, load full docs only when needed, then execute by guidance.
This keeps agents lightweight while preserving enough context for complex tasks.
Use these three together:
Note: file size for all methods should be within 10MB.
Typical paths (may vary by local setup):
One SKILL.md can usually be reused across tools.
Yes. Most skills are standardized docs + assets, so they can be reused where format is supported.
Example: retrieval + writing + automation scripts as one workflow.
Some skills come from public GitHub repositories and some are uploaded by SkillWink creators. Always review code before installing and own your security decisions.
Most common reasons:
We try to avoid that. Use ranking + comments to surface better skills: