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    disler

    create-new-skills

    disler/create-new-skills
    Productivity
    966
    3 installs

    About

    SKILL.md

    Install

    Install via Skills CLI

    or add to your agent
    • Claude Code
      Claude Code
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    ├─
    ├─
    └─

    About

    Creates new Agent Skills for Claude Code following best practices and documentation...

    SKILL.md

    Create New Skills

    Instructions

    This skill helps you create new Agent Skills for Claude Code. Before starting, read the comprehensive documentation files in the docs/ directory for complete context.

    Prerequisites

    Required Reading - Read these files in order before creating a skill:

    1. docs/claude_code_agent_skills.md - Complete guide to creating and managing skills
    2. docs/claude_code_agent_skills_overview.md - Architecture and how skills work
    3. docs/blog_equipping_agents_with_skills.md - Design principles and best practices

    Understanding Skills

    What is a Skill?

    • A directory containing a SKILL.md file with YAML frontmatter
    • Instructions that Claude loads on-demand when relevant
    • Optional supporting files (scripts, documentation, templates)
    • Like an onboarding guide for a new team member

    Progressive Disclosure (3 Levels):

    1. Metadata (always loaded): name and description in YAML frontmatter
    2. Instructions (loaded when triggered): Main body of SKILL.md
    3. Resources (loaded as needed): Additional files, scripts, templates

    Key Principle: Only relevant content enters the context window at any time.

    Skill Creation Workflow

    Step 1: Define the Skill's Purpose

    Ask the user these questions:

    1. What task or domain should this skill cover?
    2. When should Claude use this skill? (triggers)
    3. What expertise or workflows need to be captured?
    4. Does it need scripts, templates, or other resources?

    Document the answers for reference.

    Step 2: Create the Skill Directory Structure

    Create skills in the project's .claude/skills/ directory for team sharing:

    mkdir -p .claude/skills/<skill-name>
    

    Naming conventions:

    • Use lowercase with hyphens (e.g., pdf-processing, data-analysis)
    • Be descriptive but concise
    • Avoid generic names

    Note: Project skills (.claude/skills/) are automatically shared with your team via git. For personal skills only you use, create in ~/.claude/skills/ instead.

    Step 3: Design the SKILL.md Structure

    Every skill must have:

    ---
    name: Your Skill Name
    description: Brief description of what this Skill does and when to use it
    ---
    
    # Your Skill Name
    
    ## Instructions
    [Clear, step-by-step guidance for Claude]
    
    ## Examples
    [Concrete examples of using this Skill]
    

    Frontmatter Requirements:

    • name: Required, max 64 characters
    • description: Required, max 1024 characters
      • Include BOTH what it does AND when to use it
      • Mention key trigger words/phrases
      • Be specific, not vague

    Optional Frontmatter (Claude Code only):

    • allowed-tools: Restrict which tools Claude can use (e.g., Read, Grep, Glob)

    Step 4: Write the Instructions Section

    Structure the instructions as:

    1. Prerequisites - Required dependencies, tools, environment setup
    2. Workflow - Step-by-step process (numbered steps)
    3. Supporting Details - Additional context, script usage, error handling

    Best Practices:

    • Use clear, actionable language
    • Number sequential steps
    • Use bullet points for options/lists
    • Include code blocks with bash commands
    • Reference supporting files with relative links: [reference.md](reference.md)
    • Keep focused on one capability

    Example workflow format:

    ### Workflow
    
    1. **First step description**:
       ```bash
       command to run
    
    • Additional context
    • Options or variations
    1. Second step description:

      • Detailed instructions
      • What to look for
      • Expected outcomes
    2. Third step...

    
    #### Step 5: Write the Examples Section
    
    Provide 2-4 concrete examples showing:
    - Different use cases
    - Various input formats
    - Step-by-step execution
    - Expected outcomes
    
    **Example format:**
    ```markdown
    ### Example 1: Descriptive Title
    
    User request:
    

    User's exact request text

    
    You would:
    1. First action
    2. Second action with command:
       ```bash
       actual command
    
    1. Next steps...
    2. Final result
    
    #### Step 6: Add Supporting Files (Optional)
    
    If the skill needs additional context:
    1. Create files alongside SKILL.md
    2. Reference them from instructions: `[forms.md](forms.md)`
    3. Use progressive disclosure - split by topic/scenario
    
    **Common supporting file types:**
    - Additional instructions (e.g., `advanced_usage.md`)
    - Reference documentation (e.g., `api_reference.md`)
    - Scripts in `scripts/` directory
    - Templates in `templates/` directory
    - Configuration examples
    
    **Script guidelines:**
    - Make executable: `chmod +x scripts/*.py`
    - Add PEP 723 inline dependencies for Python scripts
    - Include usage instructions in SKILL.md
    - Return clear output for Claude to parse
    
    #### Step 7: Test the Skill
    
    1. Verify file structure:
       ```bash
       ls -la .claude/skills/<skill-name>/
    
    1. Check YAML frontmatter is valid:

      head -10 .claude/skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md
      
    2. Test with relevant queries:

      • Ask questions matching the skill's description
      • Verify Claude loads and uses the skill
      • Check that instructions are clear and actionable
    3. Iterate based on testing:

      • Refine description if skill doesn't trigger
      • Clarify instructions if Claude struggles
      • Add examples for common edge cases

    Step 8: Commit to Version Control

    Since project skills are automatically shared with your team, commit them to git:

    git add .claude/skills/<skill-name>
    git commit -m "Add <skill-name> skill"
    git push
    

    Note: Team members will get the skill automatically when they pull the latest changes.

    Best Practices Summary

    Description writing:

    • ✅ "Transcribes audio/video files to text using Fireworks API. Use when user asks to transcribe, convert speech to text, or needs transcripts."
    • ❌ "Helps with audio"

    Instruction organization:

    • Keep main instructions focused (under 5k tokens ideal)
    • Split complex content into linked files
    • Use progressive disclosure for optional/advanced content

    Skill scope:

    • One skill = one capability or workflow
    • Don't combine unrelated tasks
    • Make focused, composable skills

    File references:

    • Use relative paths: [file.md](file.md) not absolute paths
    • Reference scripts with full path from skill root
    • Make it clear when Claude should read vs execute files

    Common Patterns from Existing Skills

    Pattern 1: Transcription skill

    • Prerequisites section with environment setup
    • Clear numbered workflow
    • Multiple examples showing different formats
    • Supporting file for corrections/mappings

    Pattern 2: Morning debrief skill

    • Two-step process (transcribe, extend)
    • Reference to detailed prompt in separate file
    • File organization step
    • Clear output structure specification

    Pattern 3: Meta-skill (this one)

    • Extensive prereading documentation
    • Step-by-step creation workflow
    • Multiple examples with variations
    • Best practices and common patterns

    Examples

    Example 1: Creating a Simple Code Review Skill

    User request:

    Create a skill that reviews Python code for best practices
    

    You would:

    1. Read the documentation files in docs/
    2. Ask clarifying questions:
      • What specific best practices? (PEP 8, security, performance?)
      • Should it check only or suggest fixes?
      • Any specific frameworks or libraries?
    3. Create the skill directory:
      mkdir -p .claude/skills/python-code-review
      
    4. Write SKILL.md with:
      ---
      name: Python Code Review
      description: Reviews Python code for PEP 8 compliance, security issues, and performance. Use when reviewing Python code, checking code quality, or analyzing Python files.
      allowed-tools: Read, Grep, Glob
      ---
      
    5. Add Instructions section with:
      • Prerequisites (none needed, uses built-in tools)
      • Workflow:
        1. Read the Python file(s)
        2. Check PEP 8 compliance
        3. Identify security issues
        4. Suggest performance improvements
        5. Provide summary with specific line references
    6. Add 3 examples:
      • Example 1: Single file review
      • Example 2: Multi-file project review
      • Example 3: Focused security review
    7. Test with sample Python files

    Example 2: Creating a Data Analysis Skill with Scripts

    User request:

    Build a skill for analyzing CSV data with statistics and visualizations
    

    You would:

    1. Read documentation files
    2. Define scope with user:
      • What statistics? (mean, median, correlations?)
      • What visualizations? (charts, plots?)
      • Output format? (markdown report, images?)
    3. Create structure:
      mkdir -p .claude/skills/csv-analysis/scripts
      mkdir -p .claude/skills/csv-analysis/templates
      
    4. Write SKILL.md referencing:
      • scripts/analyze.py - Statistical analysis script
      • scripts/visualize.py - Chart generation script
      • templates/report_template.md - Output template
    5. Create Python scripts with inline dependencies:
      # /// script
      # requires-python = ">=3.10"
      # dependencies = ["pandas", "matplotlib", "seaborn"]
      # ///
      
    6. Write clear instructions for:
      • When to run which script
      • How to interpret output
      • How to customize analysis
    7. Add examples showing:
      • Basic statistics
      • Visualization generation
      • Custom report creation
    8. Test with sample CSV files

    Example 3: Creating a Multi-File Documentation Skill

    User request:

    Create a skill for writing technical documentation with our company's style guide
    

    You would:

    1. Read documentation files
    2. Gather requirements:
      • Get company style guide document
      • What types of docs? (API, user guides, architecture?)
      • Any templates or examples?
    3. Create comprehensive structure:
      mkdir -p .claude/skills/tech-docs/{templates,examples,guidelines}
      
    4. Organize content:
      • SKILL.md - Overview and workflow
      • guidelines/style_guide.md - Company style rules
      • guidelines/api_docs.md - API documentation specifics
      • guidelines/user_guides.md - User guide standards
      • templates/api_template.md - API doc template
      • templates/guide_template.md - User guide template
      • examples/ - Sample documentation
    5. Write SKILL.md that:
      • References guidelines by doc type
      • Uses progressive disclosure (only load needed guidelines)
      • Provides workflow for each doc type
    6. Add examples for:
      • API endpoint documentation
      • User guide creation
      • Architecture decision records
    7. Test with various documentation requests

    Example 4: Extending an Existing Skill

    User request:

    Add spell correction to our transcribe skill
    

    You would:

    1. Read current skill:
      cat .claude/skills/transcribe/SKILL.md
      
    2. Identify where to add the feature:
      • After transcription step
      • Before final output
    3. Create supporting file:
      touch .claude/skills/transcribe/spell_corrections.md
      
    4. Write correction mappings in new file:
      # Spell Corrections
      - "cloud code" → "claude code"
      - "API" → "API" (ensure caps)
      ...
      
    5. Update SKILL.md workflow:
      • Add step: "Apply spell corrections from spell_corrections.md"
      • Reference the corrections file
    6. Update examples to show correction step
    7. Test with audio that has common errors

    Summary

    Creating skills is about packaging expertise into discoverable, composable capabilities. Follow these principles:

    1. Read the docs first - Understand progressive disclosure and skill architecture
    2. Write clear descriptions - Include what AND when
    3. Keep instructions focused - Use supporting files for additional context
    4. Test thoroughly - Verify Claude discovers and uses the skill correctly
    5. Iterate with feedback - Refine based on actual usage

    Skills transform general-purpose Claude into a specialist for your domain. Start small, test early, and expand as needed.

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    Repository
    disler/claude-code-hooks-multi-agent-observability
    Files