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Found 1,658 Skills
Build messaging agents and apps with Spectrum — Photon's unified messaging SDK. Write your handler logic once and ship it across iMessage, WhatsApp Business, the terminal, or a custom platform. Spectrum is multi-platform by design and is becoming multi-language; the current SDK is `spectrum-ts` (TypeScript), with additional language SDKs planned. Use this skill for any Spectrum question — quickstart, multi-platform setup, receiving messages, content builders, spaces and users, reactions and replies, platform narrowing, the built-in providers (iMessage cloud/local/dedicated with message effects, Terminal TUI test harness, WhatsApp Business 1:1), custom event streams, graceful shutdown, building your own provider with `definePlatform`, and the production architecture patterns Photon uses internally to ship agents that live natively inside IM apps (five-stage inbound pipeline with debounce → batch flush → mark as read → generate → send, in-flight cancellation with abort signals, drain-in-handler, carry-forward, idempotent retries via stable client GUIDs and a startIndex resume cursor, per-resource memory scope `resourceId` vs `threadId`, durable job-failure audit log). This is the entry point for the skill; consult the topic files in this directory for full reference. Keywords: spectrum, spectrum-ts, photon, unified messaging, multi-platform, multi-language, im agent, messaging agent, imessage, whatsapp, whatsapp business, terminal, tuichat, definePlatform, custom platform, platform provider, platform narrowing, app.messages, Spectrum(), space, send, reply, react, tapback, typing indicator, responding, startTyping, stopTyping, content builder, text, attachment, voice, contact, richlink, poll, group, custom content, message effects, bubble effect, screen effect, line model, dedicated line, shared pool, custom events, app.stop, lifecycle, SIGINT, graceful shutdown, message queue, debounce, batch, in-flight, cancellation, abort controller, carry forward, idempotent retry, client guid, dedup, deduplication, startIndex, resume cursor, working memory, resourceId, threadId, per-resource memory, job failure, audit log, race condition, worker crash, retry, pg-boss, queue worker, conversational agent, chat agent, native messaging, agent architecture, production agent, spectrum patterns, best practices.
GPU-accelerate Python code using CuPy, Numba CUDA, Warp, cuDF, cuML, cuGraph, KvikIO, cuCIM, cuxfilter, cuVS, cuSpatial, and RAFT. Use whenever the user mentions GPU/CUDA/NVIDIA acceleration, or wants to speed up NumPy, pandas, scikit-learn, scikit-image, NetworkX, GeoPandas, or Faiss workloads. Covers physics simulation, differentiable rendering, mesh ray casting, particle systems (DEM/SPH/fluids), vector/similarity search, GPUDirect Storage file IO, interactive dashboards, geospatial analysis, medical imaging, and sparse eigensolvers. Also use when you see CPU-bound Python code (loops, large arrays, ML pipelines, graph analytics, image processing) that would benefit from GPU acceleration, even if not explicitly requested.
Automated factory that converts GitHub repositories into standardized AI Skills. This tool is used when users provide a GitHub URL and want to "package", "wrap", or "create a Skill". It supports automatic retrieval of repository metadata, generation of standard directory structures, and injection of extended metadata required for lifecycle management.
PointPillars for 3D object detection from LiDAR point clouds. Encodes point clouds into a pseudo-image via a pillar-based representation, then applies 2D detection — used in autonomous driving and robotics. Use when training, evaluating, exporting, pruning, retraining, or running inference for a TAO PointPillars model. Trigger phrases include "train PointPillars", "LiDAR 3D detection", "point-cloud object detection", "pillar-based 3D detector".
Deformable DETR for 2D object detection. Uses deformable attention for efficient multi-scale feature processing, lighter than DINO with competitive accuracy. Use when training, evaluating, exporting, quantizing, or running inference for a TAO Deformable-DETR model. Trigger phrases include "train deformable-detr", "Deformable DETR object detection", "lightweight DETR detector".
Playwright testing best practices for Next.js applications (formerly test-playwright). This skill should be used when writing, reviewing, or debugging E2E tests with Playwright. Triggers on tasks involving test selectors, flaky tests, authentication state, API mocking, hydration testing, parallel execution, CI configuration, or debugging test failures.
Frontend development guidelines for React/TypeScript applications. Modern patterns including Suspense, lazy loading, useSuspenseQuery, file organization with features directory, MUI v7 styling, TanStack Router, performance optimization, and TypeScript best practices. Use when creating components, pages, features, fetching data, styling, routing, or working with frontend code.
Zustand state management for React and vanilla JavaScript. Use when creating stores, using selectors, persisting state to localStorage, integrating devtools, or managing global state without Redux complexity. Triggers on zustand, create(), createStore, useStore, persist, devtools, immer middleware.
Provides comprehensive guidance for Redux state management including stores, actions, reducers, middleware, selectors, and Redux Toolkit. Use when the user asks about Redux, needs to manage global state, implement Redux patterns, or work with Redux middleware.
Guidance for filtering JavaScript and XSS attack vectors from HTML while preserving original formatting. This skill should be used when tasks involve removing script content, sanitizing HTML, filtering XSS payloads, or creating security filters that must preserve the original document structure unchanged.
Guidelines for creating AI agent skills. Use when writing new skills, documenting coding patterns, or reviewing skill files. Triggers when creating or modifying files in the skills/ directory.
Create git worktrees in .worktrees/ for working on different branches without touching current working directory. Use this when the user needs to switch to another branch for quick fixes or temporary work while preserving uncommitted changes in their current worktree.