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    GGPrompts

    agent-creator

    GGPrompts/agent-creator
    AI & ML
    8
    1 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    Install via Skills CLI

    or add to your agent
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
    • Codex
      Codex
    • OpenClaw
      OpenClaw
    • Cursor
      Cursor
    • Amp
      Amp
    • GitHub Copilot
      GitHub Copilot
    • Gemini CLI
      Gemini CLI
    • Kilo Code
      Kilo Code
    • Junie
      Junie
    • Replit
      Replit
    • Windsurf
      Windsurf
    • Cline
      Cline
    • Continue
      Continue
    • OpenCode
      OpenCode
    • OpenHands
      OpenHands
    • Roo Code
      Roo Code
    • Augment
      Augment
    • Goose
      Goose
    • Trae
      Trae
    • Zencoder
      Zencoder
    • Antigravity
      Antigravity
    ├─
    ├─
    └─

    About

    Guide for creating effective Claude Code agents...

    SKILL.md

    Agent Creator

    This skill provides guidance for creating effective Claude Code agents.

    About Agents

    Agents are Markdown files with YAML frontmatter that configure Claude Code with specialized behavior. They can be used in two ways:

    1. Main Agent (claude --agent name) - Starts Claude Code as this persona
    2. Subagent (Task tool) - Spawns a focused worker that reports back

    Unlike skills (which inject knowledge into context), agents fundamentally change who Claude is for that session - the system prompt, available tools, and even the model.

    When to Create an Agent

    Use Case Create Agent? Alternative
    Specialized persona with restricted tools Yes -
    Domain expert needing specific MCPs/skills Yes -
    Cost optimization (haiku for simple tasks) Yes -
    Orchestrator that delegates to sub-agents Yes -
    Adding domain knowledge to context No Create a skill
    One-off task instructions No Direct prompting
    Reusable scripts/assets No Create a skill

    Agent vs Skill Decision

    • Agent: Changes who Claude is (persona, tools, model)
    • Skill: Changes what Claude knows (knowledge, procedures, scripts)

    Agents can load skills. Skills cannot become agents.

    Agent Anatomy

    File Location

    Agents are stored as .md files in:

    • ~/.claude/agents/ - User-level (global, all projects)
    • .claude/agents/ - Project-level (repo-specific, higher precedence)

    Required Structure

    ---
    name: agent-name
    description: "When to use this agent. Be specific about triggers."
    ---
    
    System prompt content goes here.
    

    All Configuration Options

    Field Required Type Description
    name Yes string Unique ID (lowercase, hyphens only)
    description Yes string When/why to invoke this agent
    tools No list Restrict to specific tools only
    model No string haiku, sonnet, opus, or omit to inherit
    permissionMode No string default, acceptEdits, plan, bypassPermissions
    skills No list Auto-load specific skills

    Tool Restriction

    Omitting tools grants all available tools. Specifying it creates a whitelist:

    tools:
      - Read
      - Grep
      - Glob
    

    Common tools: Read, Write, Edit, Glob, Grep, Bash, Task, WebSearch, WebFetch, TodoWrite

    See references/tool-catalog.md for the complete catalog with use cases.

    Agent Creation Process

    Step 1: Define the Agent's Purpose

    Before writing, answer:

    1. What is this agent's specialty? (one clear focus)
    2. When should it be invoked? (specific triggers)
    3. What tools does it need? (minimum viable set)
    4. What model fits the task? (haiku=fast/cheap, sonnet=balanced, opus=complex)
    5. What MCPs or skills should it load?

    Step 2: Initialize the Agent

    Run the initialization script to scaffold the agent file:

    python ~/.claude/skills/agent-creator/scripts/init_agent.py <agent-name> [--path <directory>]
    

    Default path is ~/.claude/agents/ (user-level). Use .claude/agents/ for project-level.

    Step 3: Write the System Prompt

    The system prompt (Markdown body after frontmatter) defines the agent's behavior. Follow Opus 4.5 prompting best practices from references/opus-prompting.md.

    System Prompt Structure

    ---
    name: example-agent
    description: "..."
    ---
    
    [Role statement - who this agent is]
    
    ## Capabilities
    [What this agent can do]
    
    ## Guidelines
    [How to approach tasks]
    
    ## Workflow
    [Step-by-step process if applicable]
    

    Writing Style

    • Use imperative form: "Analyze the code" not "You should analyze the code"
    • Be explicit and specific: State exactly what to do
    • Add context for why: Explain reasoning behind guidelines
    • Include concrete examples: Show expected behavior
    • Keep it focused: One clear specialty, not a generalist

    Step 4: Configure Tools and Model

    Match tools to the agent's purpose:

    Agent Type Recommended Tools Model
    Researcher Read, Grep, Glob, WebSearch, WebFetch sonnet
    Code Reviewer Read, Grep, Glob, Bash sonnet
    Writer/Editor Read, Write, Edit sonnet
    Quick Search Grep, Glob, Read haiku
    Complex Analysis Read, Grep, Glob, Task opus
    Orchestrator Task, Read, TodoWrite opus

    Step 5: Add MCP/Skill Integrations

    For agents that need external capabilities:

    skills:
      - ui-styling
      - docs-seeker
    

    Reference skills in the system prompt:

    ## Available Skills
    
    Use the `ui-styling` skill for shadcn components and Tailwind.
    Use the `docs-seeker` skill for finding library documentation.
    

    For MCP tools, mention them explicitly in the system prompt so the agent knows they're available.

    Step 6: Test and Iterate

    1. Test as main agent: claude --agent your-agent
    2. Test as subagent: Use Task tool to spawn it
    3. Verify tool restrictions: Ensure it only uses allowed tools
    4. Check persona consistency: Does it maintain character?
    5. Validate triggers: Does the description accurately predict usage?

    Opus 4.5 Prompting Guidelines

    Claude Opus 4.5 has specific characteristics that affect agent design. See references/opus-prompting.md for full details.

    Key Points

    1. Dial back aggressive language - Replace "CRITICAL/MUST" with normal phrasing
    2. Avoid "think" - Use "consider", "evaluate", "reflect" when extended thinking is off
    3. Be explicit about action - "Implement changes" vs "suggest changes"
    4. Include anti-over-engineering guidance - Opus tends to add unnecessary abstractions
    5. Examples matter - Opus follows examples precisely, ensure they're correct
    6. Parallel tool calling - Explicitly encourage when tools are independent

    Anti-Over-Engineering Snippet

    Include this in agents that write code:

    Avoid over-engineering. Only make changes directly requested or clearly necessary.
    Keep solutions simple and focused. Do not add features, refactor code, or make
    improvements beyond what was asked.
    

    Agent Patterns

    See references/agent-patterns.md for common archetypes:

    • Researcher - Read-only exploration and analysis
    • Specialist - Domain expert with focused tools
    • Reviewer - Code/content review without editing
    • Builder - Focused creation with write access
    • Orchestrator - Delegates to sub-agents
    • Quick Responder - Fast, cheap responses with haiku

    Validation Checklist

    Before finalizing an agent:

    • Name is lowercase with hyphens only
    • Description clearly states when to use the agent
    • Tools are minimal but sufficient for the task
    • Model matches complexity needs (haiku/sonnet/opus)
    • System prompt uses imperative form
    • No "CRITICAL/MUST" aggressive language
    • Includes anti-over-engineering guidance if writes code
    • Examples in prompt are accurate and helpful
    • Tested as both main agent and subagent
    Recommended Servers
    Thoughtbox
    Thoughtbox
    Browser tool
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    Repository
    ggprompts/my-gg-plugins
    Files