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Found 1,957 Skills
Technical documentation discovery via context7 and web search. Capabilities: library/framework docs lookup, topic-specific search. Keywords: llms.txt, context7, documentation, library docs, API docs. Use when: searching library documentation, finding framework guides, looking up API references.
This skill should be used when creating a skill for a CLI tool. Use when users ask to document a command-line tool, create CLI guidance, or build a skill for terminal commands. Essential for systematically introspecting CLI tools through help text, man pages, GitHub repos, and online research, then organizing findings into effective skill documentation.
Build production-ready Bright Data integrations with best practices baked in. Reference documentation for developers using coding assistants (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.) to implement web scraping, search, browser automation, and structured data extraction. Covers Web Unlocker API, SERP API, Web Scraper API, and Browser API (Scraping Browser).
Microscopic deconstruction and exhaustive analysis of code, systems, documents, or concepts. Breaks subjects into atomic components, examines every facet, and produces encyclopedic reports. Use when deep understanding is needed before making changes, analyzing unfamiliar codebases, or producing thorough technical documentation. Triggers on "심층 분석", "deep dive", "분석해줘", "해부", "deconstruct", "뜯어봐", "thoroughly analyze", "코드 분석".
Creates structured Request for Comments (RFC) documents for proposing and deciding on significant changes. Use when the user says "write an RFC", "create a proposal", "I need to propose a change", "draft an RFC", "document a decision", or needs stakeholder alignment before making a major technical or process decision. Do NOT use for TDDs/implementation docs (use technical-design-doc-creator instead), README files, or general documentation.
Creative writing skill for creating canonical reference documentation (wikis) for fictional worlds, characters, and story events. Use when creating or updating wiki pages, official documentation, character profiles, location documentation, or lore pages. Creates polished, sourced, encyclopedic reference material.
Use this skill when generating AI-agent-friendly documentation for a git repo or directory, answering questions about a codebase from existing docs, or incrementally updating documentation after code changes. Triggers on codedocs:generate, codedocs:ask, codedocs:update, "document this codebase", "generate docs for this repo", "what does this project do", "update the docs after my changes", or any task requiring structured codebase documentation that serves AI agents, developers, and new team members.
Delegate coding tasks to Google Jules AI agent for asynchronous execution. Use when user says: 'have Jules fix', 'delegate to Jules', 'send to Jules', 'ask Jules to', 'check Jules sessions', 'pull Jules results', 'jules add tests', 'jules add docs', 'jules review pr'. Handles: bug fixes, documentation, features, tests, refactoring, code reviews. Works with GitHub repos, creates PRs.
Use when a Google Sheets URL (docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/) or raw spreadsheet ID is present, or when the user says "read the sheet", "fetch spreadsheet", "convert sheet", "doc sheet", "import from Google Sheet", "get data from sheet", "đọc sheet", "doc sheet", "lay du lieu tu sheet", "lay data tu google sheet", or wants to export, document, or convert Google Sheet data into markdown, a table, a report, or documentation. Do NOT trigger for: Excel (.xlsx), CSV, Google Docs (docs.google.com/document), databases, or how-to questions about Google Sheets.
Search the web and scrape pages using the local tool stack: SearXNG (meta-search), Lightpanda (fast headless fetch), and Agent-Browser (full browser automation). This is your DEFAULT web skill — use it whenever you need to look something up, research a topic, fetch a webpage, extract content from a URL, check current information, find documentation, do competitive research, or answer any question that benefits from live web data. Triggers on any form of: search for, look up, google, find out, research, what's the latest on, fetch this page, scrape this site, check this URL, pull info from, web search, or any task where current web information would improve your answer. Even if the user doesn't explicitly ask you to search — if answering well requires current info you don't have, use this skill. NOT for interactive browser automation like form filling or clicking (use [[agent-browser]] or [[browser-use]]).
Grounds every implementation decision in official documentation. Use when you want authoritative, source-cited code free from outdated patterns. Use when building with any framework or library where correctness matters.
Interactively guide users through configuring ZenMux Base URL, API endpoint, API Key, and model settings for any tool or SDK. Use this skill whenever the user wants to SET UP, CONFIGURE, or CONNECT a tool to ZenMux — including questions like "how do I set up ZenMux in Cursor", "what's the base URL", "how to configure Claude Code with ZenMux", "endpoint for Anthropic API", "help me fill in the API settings". Trigger on: "configure", "setup", "set up", "base url", "endpoint", "api key", "接入", "配置", "设置", "base url 填什么", "怎么填", "怎么接入", "怎么配置", "API 地址", "接口地址". Also trigger when users mention a tool name (Cursor, Cline, Claude Code, Cherry Studio, Open-WebUI, Dify, Obsidian, Sider, Copilot, Codex, Gemini CLI, opencode, etc.) together with ZenMux in a configuration context. Treat the user as a first-time user and guide them step by step. Do NOT trigger for usage queries, documentation lookups, or general product questions — use zenmux-usage or zenmux-context instead.