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Found 114 Skills
Pragmatic coding standards - concise, direct, no over-engineering, no unnecessary comments
Clean Code principles, professional practices, and workflows for TypeScript developers. Based on Robert C. Martin's "Clean Code" and "The Clean Coder" books. IMPORTANT: When this skill is active, always load and consult the reference files (rules.md, examples.md) before giving advice or writing code. Reference content takes precedence over general knowledge. Use this skill when: - Writing TypeScript/JavaScript code - Reviewing code or pull requests - Refactoring existing code - Following test-driven development (TDD) - Fixing bugs with proper test coverage - Planning test strategy for features - Estimating tasks accurately - Handling deadlines and commitments professionally - Working effectively with teams
Assist developers in writing clean, maintainable code following software engineering best practices. Use when conducting code reviews, refactoring code, enforcing coding standards, seeking guidance on clean code principles, or integrating automated quality checks into development workflows.
Use when writing, reviewing, or refactoring code. Apply when naming variables or functions, structuring classes, handling errors, writing tests, or when code feels complex or hard to understand. Based on Robert C. Martin's Clean Code.
SOLID principles, design patterns, DRY, KISS, and clean code fundamentals. Use when reviewing architecture, checking code quality, refactoring, or discussing design decisions. Triggers on "review architecture", "check code quality", "SOLID principles", "design patterns", or "clean code".
Review generated or changed production code before it ships, using Clean Code, SOLID, DRY, KISS, YAGNI, and LLM-specific failure-mode checks in any programming language. Best used reactively after an agent writes, edits, refactors, or fixes code, before presenting, committing, or merging the result. Use when the user asks "review this PR", "is this safe to merge?", "make this cleaner", "audit this code", "refactor this", "fix this bug", or after a coding agent produced implementation code. Can also guide writing when explicitly invoked before a risky edit. DO NOT USE for factual/conceptual questions, CI/tooling config, git workflow, running/debugging tests, pure architecture discussion, prose writing, data analysis, or test-code review (use test-guard).
Clean Code principles adapted for C#/.NET including naming, variables, functions, SOLID, error handling, and async patterns. Use when: (1) reviewing C# code, (2) refactoring for clarity, (3) writing new code, (4) code review feedback.
Function design patterns emphasizing single responsibility and clarity.
Write readable, maintainable code through disciplined naming, small functions, and clean error handling. Use when the user mentions "code review", "naming conventions", "function too long", "code smells", or "readable code". Covers SRP, comment discipline, formatting, and unit testing. For refactoring techniques, see refactoring-patterns. For architecture, see clean-architecture.
Applies principles from Robert C. Martin's 'Clean Code'. Use this skill when writing, reviewing, or refactoring code to ensure high quality, readability, and maintainability. Covers naming, functions, comments, error handling, and class design.
Canonical, cross-language clean code standard with stable rule IDs (CC-*). Use when writing/reviewing code, defining team standards, or mapping lint/CI findings to consistent CC-* rule citations.
Use when writing, reviewing, or refactoring code for maintainability and readability. Triggers on code reviews, naming discussions, function design, error handling, and test writing. Based on Robert C. Martin's Clean Code handbook.