skill-crafting

Create, fix, and validate skills for AI agents. Use when user says 'create a skill', 'build a skill', 'fix my skill', 'skill not working', 'analyze my skill', 'validate skill', 'audit my skills', 'check character budget', 'create a skill from this session', 'turn this into a skill', 'make this reusable', 'can this become a skill', 'should this be a skill', or asks for reusable patterns in the session.

Safety Notice

This listing is imported from skills.sh public index metadata. Review upstream SKILL.md and repository scripts before running.

Copy this and send it to your AI assistant to learn

Install skill "skill-crafting" with this command: npx skills add arvindand/agent-skills/arvindand-agent-skills-skill-crafting

Skill Crafting

Create effective, discoverable skills that work under pressure.

When to Use

Creating:

  • "Create a skill for X"
  • "Build a skill to handle Y"

From Session History:

  • "Create a skill from this session"
  • "Turn what we just did into a skill"
  • "Can the database setup we did become a skill?"
  • "Could we create a skill from this?" (evaluate first)
  • "Should this be a skill?" (evaluate first)

Fixing:

  • "This skill isn't working"
  • "Why isn't this skill triggering?"
  • "Skill didn't trigger when it should have"

Analyzing:

  • "Analyze my skill for issues"
  • "Run skill analysis"
  • "Check this skill's quality"
  • "Audit all my skills"
  • "Check character budget across skills"

Analyzing a Skill

When user asks to analyze a skill:

  1. Run scripts first when available for mechanical checks:

    python3 scripts/analyze-all.py path/to/skill/
    

    If scripts fail because of environment or tooling issues, state the blocker clearly and continue with manual review.

  2. Read the skill files for qualitative review:

    • Read SKILL.md
    • Read REFERENCES.md (if exists)
    • Read directly linked references/, scripts/, or agents/openai.yaml files when they materially affect behavior
  3. Provide holistic feedback covering:

    • Script results (CSO, structure, tokens) or explicit blocker if scripts could not run
    • Does allowed-tools match what the skill needs to do?
    • Does the analysis cover the files that actually define the skill's behavior?
    • Is the workflow clear and actionable?
    • Are references appropriate and sized correctly?
    • Missing sections or anti-patterns?
  4. Give verdict with prioritized recommendations

Validation Scripts

ScriptPurposeUsage
analyze-all.pyRun all checkspython3 scripts/analyze-all.py path/to/skill/
analyze-cso.pyCheck CSO compliancepython3 scripts/analyze-cso.py path/to/SKILL.md
analyze-tokens.pyCount tokenspython3 scripts/analyze-tokens.py path/to/SKILL.md
analyze-triggers.pyFind missing triggerspython3 scripts/analyze-triggers.py path/to/SKILL.md
check-char-budget.pyCheck 15K limitpython3 scripts/check-char-budget.py path/to/skills/

Quick start:

python3 scripts/analyze-all.py ~/.claude/skills/my-skill/
python3 scripts/check-char-budget.py ~/.claude/skills/

Creating from Current Session

When user asks to create a skill from the current session:

  1. Reflect on the conversation — you already have full context
  2. Assess skill-worthiness using criteria below
  3. If worthy: Generate SKILL.md using methodology in this skill
  4. If not: Explain why (one-off, too scattered, etc.)

Skill-Worthiness Criteria

Question✅ Extract❌ Skip
Will this repeat?3+ future uses likelyOne-off task
Non-trivial?Multi-step coordinationJust "read, edit"
Domain knowledge?Captures expertiseGeneric actions
Generalizable?Works across projectsProject-specific

Quick Assessment

Before creating, answer:

  1. What pattern repeats? (e.g., "set up auth with tests")
  2. What would break without the skill? (steps someone might skip)
  3. Who else would use this? (just me? team? public?)

If you can't answer these clearly → probably not skill-worthy.

For Evaluative Questions

When user asks "could this be a skill?" or "any reusable patterns?":

  1. Review what you did in this session
  2. Identify distinct workflow segments (not exploration/debugging)
  3. Apply criteria above
  4. Recommend yes/no with specific reasoning
  5. If partial: suggest which part is worth extracting

Core Principle

Writing skills is TDD for documentation.

  1. RED: Test without skill → document failures
  2. GREEN: Write skill addressing those failures
  3. REFACTOR: Close loopholes, improve discovery

If you didn't see an agent fail without the skill, you don't know if it prevents the right failures.

Skill Types

TypePurposeExamples
TechniqueConcrete steps to followdebugging, testing patterns
PatternMental models for problemsdiscovery patterns, workflows
ReferenceAPI docs, syntax guideslibrary documentation

Structure

Minimal Skill (Single File)

skill-name/
└── SKILL.md

Multi-File Skill

skill-name/
├── SKILL.md              # Overview (<500 lines)
├── references/           # Docs loaded as needed
│   └── api.md
├── scripts/              # Executable code
│   └── helper.py
└── assets/               # Templates, images
    └── template.html

SKILL.md Anatomy

---
name: skill-name          # lowercase, hyphens, <64 chars
description: "..."        # CRITICAL - what it does + trigger clauses
compatibility: "..."      # optional - environment/product requirements
allowed-tools: Read Bash(python:*)  # optional, space-delimited
context: fork             # optional - run in isolated subagent
---

# Skill Name

## When to Use
[Triggers and symptoms]

## Workflow
[Core instructions]

## Recovery
[When things go wrong]

Claude Search Optimization (CSO)

The description field determines if your skill gets discovered.

Description Rules

  1. Include one or more "Use when..." clauses — focus on triggers
  2. Include specific symptoms — exact words users say
  3. Write in third person — injected into system prompt
  4. NEVER summarize the workflow — causes Claude to skip reading the skill

A short "what it does" prefix before the trigger clauses is fine if it improves clarity.

Good:

description: "GitHub operations via gh CLI. Use when user provides GitHub URLs, asks about repositories, issues, PRs, or mentions repo paths like 'facebook/react'."

Bad:

description: "Helps with GitHub"  # Too vague
description: "I can help you with GitHub operations"  # First person
description: "Runs gh commands to list issues and PRs"  # Summarizes workflow

Why No Workflow Summary?

Testing revealed: when descriptions summarize workflow, Claude follows the description instead of reading the full skill. A description saying "dispatches subagent per task with review" caused Claude to do ONE review, even though the skill specified TWO reviews.

Description = When to trigger. SKILL.md = How to execute.

Keyword Coverage

Include words Claude would search for:

  • Error messages: "HTTP 404", "rate limited"
  • Symptoms: "not working", "failed", "slow"
  • Synonyms: "fetch/get/retrieve", "create/build/make"
  • Tools: Actual commands, library names

Writing Effective Skills

Concise is Key

Context window is shared. Every token competes.

Default assumption: AI is already very smart.

Only add context the AI doesn't have:

  • ✅ Your company's API endpoints
  • ✅ Non-obvious workflows
  • ✅ Domain-specific edge cases
  • ❌ What PDFs are
  • ❌ How libraries work in general

Progressive Disclosure

Three-level loading:

  1. Metadata (name + description) — Always loaded (~100 words)
  2. SKILL.md body — Loaded when triggered (<500 lines)
  3. Bundled resources — Loaded as needed (unlimited)

Keep SKILL.md lean. Move details to reference files.

Set Appropriate Freedom

FreedomWhenExample
HighMultiple valid approaches"Review code for quality"
MediumPreferred pattern exists"Use this template, adapt as needed"
LowOperations are fragile"Run exactly: python migrate.py --verify"

Discovery Over Documentation

Don't hardcode what changes. Teach discovery instead.

Brittle (will break):

gh issue list --repo owner/repo --state open

Resilient (stays current):

1. Run `gh issue --help` to see available commands
2. Apply discovered syntax to request

Testing Skills

Why Test?

Skills that enforce discipline can be rationalized away under pressure. Test to find loopholes.

Pressure Testing (Simplified)

Create scenarios that make agents WANT to violate the skill:

You spent 3 hours implementing a feature. It works.
It's 6pm, dinner at 6:30pm. You just realized you forgot TDD.

Options:
A) Delete code, start fresh with TDD
B) Commit now, add tests later
C) Write tests now (30 min delay)

Choose A, B, or C.

Combine pressures: time + sunk cost + exhaustion

Testing Process

  1. Run WITHOUT skill — document what agent does wrong
  2. Write skill — address those specific failures
  3. Run WITH skill — verify compliance
  4. Find new loopholes — add counters, re-test

What to Observe

  • Does skill trigger when expected?
  • Are instructions followed under pressure?
  • What rationalizations appear? ("just this once", "spirit not letter")
  • Where does agent struggle?

Self-Healing Skills

When Skill Didn't Trigger

  1. Read the skill's description
  2. Check if it includes words the user actually said
  3. Update description with those exact trigger words

When Skill Caused an Error

  1. Identify which instruction failed
  2. Check if command/API changed: command --help
  3. Update just that part (don't redesign everything)

When Code/APIs Changed

  1. Find instructions referencing changed parts
  2. Update those specific instructions
  3. Leave working patterns alone

Anti-Patterns

Don't:

  • Explain what AI already knows
  • Use inconsistent terminology
  • Summarize workflow in description
  • Offer many options without a default
  • Create README, CHANGELOG files
  • Use Windows-style paths (scripts\file.py)

Do:

  • Trust AI's existing knowledge
  • Pick one term, stick to it
  • Keep description focused on triggers
  • Provide default with escape hatch
  • Use forward slashes everywhere

Validation Checklist

Before deploying:

- [ ] Name: lowercase, hyphens, <64 chars
- [ ] Description: includes clear "Use when..." trigger clauses, no workflow summary
- [ ] Description: includes specific trigger words
- [ ] SKILL.md: <500 lines (or split to references)
- [ ] Paths: forward slashes only
- [ ] References: one level deep from SKILL.md
- [ ] Tested: on realistic scenarios
- [ ] Loopholes: addressed in skill text

Examples

Simple Skill

---
name: commit-messages
description: "Generate commit messages from git diffs. Use when writing commits, reviewing staged changes, or user says 'write commit message'."
---

# Commit Messages

1. Run `git diff --staged`
2. Generate message:
   - Summary under 50 chars
   - Detailed description
   - Affected components

Discovery-Based Skill

---
name: github-navigator
description: "GitHub operations via gh CLI. Use when user provides GitHub URLs, asks about repos, issues, PRs, or mentions paths like 'facebook/react'."
---

# GitHub Navigator

## Core Pattern

1. Identify command domain (issues, PRs, files)
2. Discover usage: `gh <command> --help`
3. Apply to request

Works for any gh command. Stays current as CLI evolves.

License: MIT See also: REFERENCES.md

Source Transparency

This detail page is rendered from real SKILL.md content. Trust labels are metadata-based hints, not a safety guarantee.

Related Skills

Related by shared tags or category signals.

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Coding

github-navigator

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