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Found 1,213 Skills
MUST USE for anything related to mise, development tool versions, or dev environment setup. Triggers: (1) User mentions mise, mise.toml, .tool-versions, or mise commands like 'mise use', 'mise install', 'mise run'. (2) User wants to install, switch, pin, upgrade, or check versions of dev tools — node, python, go, ruby, java, rust, etc. — at project or global level, even without mentioning mise (e.g. 'set up node 22', 'what python version', 'upgrade go', 'check for outdated tools', 'configure dev environment'). (3) User wants to manage per-project environment variables via config files (e.g. 'add DATABASE_URL env var', 'set up env vars for different environments'). (4) User wants to define or run project tasks via mise (e.g. 'create a build task', 'run tests with mise'). Do NOT trigger for: Dockerfiles, package.json scripts, Makefiles, nvm/pyenv/rbenv commands, pip/npm package installation, git tags, CI/CD config, or deployment.
Configure multi-tenant organizations, manage members and invitations, define custom roles and permissions, set up teams, and implement RBAC using Better Auth's organization plugin. Use when users need org setup, team management, member roles, access control, or the Better Auth organization plugin.
Composable development workflow system. Phases define reusable steps; paradigms compose them into ordered sequences. Four paradigms cover greenfield, enhancement, bugfix, and addition task types.
Develop Custom SCAPI endpoints for B2C Commerce. Use when creating REST APIs, defining api.json routes, writing schema.yaml (OAS 3.0), or building headless commerce integrations. Covers cartridge structure, endpoint implementation, and OAuth scope configuration.
Work with B2C Commerce site metadata XML for custom attributes and object types. Use when defining custom attributes on products/orders/customers, creating custom object types, or setting site preferences via XML import. Covers site import, site archive, system object extensions, system-objecttype-extensions.xml, custom-objecttype-definitions.xml, Business Manager attributes, BM configuration, and data model definitions.
Orchestrates end-to-end software development using the addyosmani/agent-skills framework. Guides the user through define → plan → build → verify → review → ship phases, spawns subagents for each step, tracks state persistently, and never loses focus on workflow completion. Use when the user says "let's build X", "help me implement X", "walk me through X", or wants structured multi-phase dev guidance. Also triggers when a task is clearly non-trivial and would benefit from phased execution.
Progressive Domain Crystallization (PDC) — a skill for building and maintaining a living domain knowledge base for any custom business application. Use this skill whenever the user is developing a business application and wants the AI to accumulate understanding of internal terminology, entities, relationships, and business rules over time — especially when that knowledge is not fully defined upfront and grows across sessions. Trigger on any of: "remember how our system works", "learn our domain", "track business entities", "build domain knowledge", "understand our terminology", "grow AI context over time", "domain model", "business rules documentation", or whenever a user says the AI doesn't understand their business-specific language or data model. Also use at the start of any session where a DOMAIN.md file exists in the project — always read it before doing any work.
Use this skill whenever writing, reviewing, debugging, or refactoring TypeScript code that uses the Effect-TS library. Trigger when you see imports from `effect`, `effect/*`, or any `@effect/*` scoped package (schema, platform, sql, opentelemetry, cli, cluster, rpc, vitest). Trigger on Effect-specific constructs: Effect.gen generators, Schema.Struct/Schema.Class definitions, Layer/Context.Tag/Service patterns, Effect.pipe pipelines, Data.TaggedError/Data.Class error types, Ref/Queue/PubSub/Deferred concurrency primitives, Match module, Config providers, Scope/Exit/Cause/Runtime patterns, or any code using Effect's typed error channel (E parameter). Also trigger when the user asks about Effect patterns, migration from Promises/fp-ts/neverthrow to Effect, or how to structure an Effect application. Covers the full ecosystem: core Effect type, Schema validation, error management, concurrency (fibers, queues, semaphores, pools), streams/sinks, services and layers (DI), resource management, scheduling, observability, platform APIs, and AI integration. Do NOT trigger for React's useEffect, Redux side effects, or general English usage of "effect" unless the context clearly involves the Effect-TS library.
Write and refactor TypeScript code in repos that use Effect-TS services, Zod schemas, event-sourced persistence, and namespace-driven architecture. Use this skill when implementing features, fixing bugs, writing tests, or refactoring in opencode or any TypeScript codebase built on the same stack (Effect DI, Drizzle ORM, Hono routes, Bun runtime). Triggers on tasks involving Effect services, namespace modules, Zod schema definitions, SyncEvent patterns, tool implementations, test writing, or code review in Effect-based TypeScript projects.
Provide instructions on how to build with Arc, Circle's blockchain where USDC is the native gas token. Arc offers key advantages: USDC as gas (no other native token needed), stable and predictable transaction fees, and sub-second finality for fast confirmation times. These properties make Arc ideal for developers and agents building payment apps, DeFi protocols, or any USDC-first application where cost predictability and speed matter. Use skill when Arc or Arc Testnet is mentioned, working with any smart contracts related to Arc, configuring Arc in blockchain projects, bridging USDC to Arc via CCTP, or building USDC-first applications. Triggers: Arc, Arc Testnet, USDC gas, deploy to Arc, Arc chain, stable fees, fast finality.
Develop brand positioning strategy including positioning statements, perceptual maps, and brand personality/archetype analysis. Use this skill when the user needs to define or refine how their brand is perceived relative to competitors, craft a positioning statement, build a brand identity framework, or map competitive positions — even if they say 'what makes us different', 'our brand feels generic', or 'how do customers see us vs competitors'.
Apply STP (Segmentation, Targeting, Positioning) framework for market strategy. Use this skill when the user needs to define target customer segments, select which segments to pursue, or craft a positioning statement — even if they say 'who is our customer', 'which market should we focus on', or 'how should we position ourselves'.