Loading...
Loading...
Found 332 Skills
Use when the user needs workflow orchestration such as branching, concurrency, approvals, waiting and resume, runtime stream, restart-safe execution, mixed sync/async function or module orchestration, event-driven fan-out, process-clarity refactors that make stages explicit, performance-oriented refactors that collapse split requests, or explicit draft-review-revise style multi-stage flows. The user does not need to say TriggerFlow explicitly.
Diagnoses and fixes .NET MAUI development environment issues. Validates .NET SDK, workloads, Java JDK, Android SDK, Xcode, and Windows SDK. All version requirements discovered dynamically from NuGet WorkloadDependencies.json — never hardcoded. Use when: setting up MAUI development, build errors mentioning SDK/workload/JDK/Android, "Android SDK not found", "Java version" errors, "Xcode not found", environment verification after updates, or any MAUI toolchain issues. Do not use for: non-MAUI .NET projects, Xamarin.Forms apps, runtime app crashes unrelated to environment setup, or app store publishing issues. Works on macOS, Windows, and Linux.
MUST USE for any task involving the dotenvx CLI tool — encrypting .env files, running commands with injected env vars, managing secrets across environments, and decrypting at runtime. Use this skill whenever the user mentions dotenvx, dotenv encryption, DOTENV_PRIVATE_KEY, encrypted .env files, or the dotenvx encrypt/run/set/get/decrypt/keypair commands. Also trigger when the user wants to: commit .env files safely to git, stop sharing secrets over Slack/chat, encrypt environment variables with public-key cryptography, set up multi-environment .env configs (production/staging/ci), manage secrets in a monorepo with -fk flag, migrate from python-dotenv or plain dotenv to encrypted envs, inject env vars into any process across any language (Node, Python, Ruby, Go, Rust, etc.), or configure CI/CD pipelines (GitHub Actions, Docker) with encrypted env files. This skill contains the authoritative CLI reference — without it, responses will hallucinate non-existent commands and flags.
Vercel Routing Middleware guidance — request interception before cache, rewrites, redirects, personalization. Works with any framework. Supports Edge, Node.js, and Bun runtimes. Use when intercepting requests at the platform level.
This skill should be used when the user wants to "package an MCP server", "bundle an MCP", "make an MCPB", "ship a local MCP server", "distribute a local MCP", discusses ".mcpb files", mentions bundling a Node or Python runtime with their MCP server, or needs an MCP server that interacts with the local filesystem, desktop apps, or OS and must be installable without the user having Node/Python set up.
Applies and explains code conventions across TypeScript, React, C#, and Markdown. Enforces naming rules, file naming patterns, TSDoc and XML doc standards, inline comment intent (the *why*, not the *what*), code structure, error handling, async patterns, and dead code policy. Also enforces ADR and contributor doc decisions, and flags decisions that appear stale or misaligned with current tooling. USE FOR: convention questions, code review against project standards, applying naming rules, auditing intent comments, checking TSDoc completeness, enforcing recorded ADR decisions, and flagging stale architectural decisions. DO NOT USE FOR: security vulnerability scanning, performance profiling, runtime debugging, or generating net-new code without a review target.
Rust ecosystem expert covering crate selection, library recommendations, framework comparisons, async runtime choices (tokio, async-std), and common tools.
State machine-based vector animation with runtime interactivity and web integration. Use this skill when creating interactive animations, state-driven UI, animated components with logic, or designer-created animations with runtime control. Triggers on tasks involving Rive, state machines, interactive vector animations, animation with input handling, ViewModel data binding, or React Rive integration. Alternative to Lottie for animations requiring state machines and two-way interactivity.
Runs Fastly Compute WASM applications locally with Viceroy, specifically for Rust and Component Model projects. Use when starting a local Fastly Compute dev server with Viceroy, configuring fastly.toml for local backend overrides and store definitions, running Rust unit tests with cargo-nextest against the Compute runtime, debugging Compute apps locally, adapting core WASM modules to the Component Model, or troubleshooting local Compute testing issues (connection refused, missing backends, store config). For non-Rust Compute work or understanding the Compute API, prefer the fastlike skill instead — its source code is easier to understand as a Fastly Compute API reference.
Run TypeScript type checking with tsc --noEmit and parse errors into actionable, file-grouped output. Use when validating TypeScript code before commits, after refactors, or when checking for type regressions. Use for "type check", "tsc", "TypeScript errors", "type validation", or pre-commit TypeScript verification. Do NOT use for linting, test execution, runtime errors, or JavaScript-only projects without tsconfig.json.
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test my site", "test the site", "run site tests", "check if site is working", "verify site", "smoke test", "test pages", "check api calls", "test web api", "verify deployment works", or wants to test a deployed, activated Power Pages site at runtime using browser-based navigation, page crawling, and API request verification.
Load this skill for any up-fetch task: `up(fetch, getDefaultOptions?)`, `upfetch(url, options?)`. Covers dynamic defaults, auth, request shaping, validation, error handling, lifecycle timing, and runtime caveats.