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Found 7 Skills
This skill should be used when writing documentation for codebases, including README files, architecture documentation, code comments, and API documentation. Use this skill when users request help documenting their code, creating getting-started guides, explaining project structure, or making codebases more accessible to new developers. The skill provides templates, best practices, and structured approaches for creating clear, beginner-friendly documentation.
Look up CE.SDK React reference docs, guides, and configuration pages. Use when the user needs CE.SDK docs for React — configuration, UI customization, export options, feature guides, or getting-started instructions. Also triggered by "IMG.LY", "CreativeEditor", "CE.SDK", or "cesdk" when the user needs an existing React doc page. Not for writing code (use build) or concept explanations (use explain). <example> Context: User asks about React configuration user: "How do I configure the editor in React?" assistant: "I'll use /cesdk:docs-react to look up configuration options." </example> <example> Context: User needs React component setup user: "How do I embed CE.SDK in a React component?" assistant: "Let me use /cesdk:docs-react to find the relevant documentation." </example>
Use this skill when designing SDKs, writing onboarding flows, creating changelogs, or authoring migration guides. Triggers on developer experience (DX), API ergonomics, SDK design, getting-started guides, quickstart documentation, breaking change communication, version migration, upgrade paths, developer portals, and developer advocacy. Covers the full DX lifecycle from first impression to long-term retention.
The craft of communicating technical concepts clearly to developers. Developer communications isn't marketing—it's about building trust through transparency, accuracy, and genuine utility. The best devrel content helps developers solve real problems. This skill covers technical documentation, developer tutorials, API references, changelog writing, developer blog posts, and developer community engagement. Great developer communications treats developers as peers, not leads to convert. Use when "documentation, docs, tutorial, getting started, API reference, changelog, release notes, developer guide, devrel, developer relations, code examples, SDK docs, README, documentation, devrel, tutorials, api-docs, developer-experience, technical-writing, getting-started, changelogs" mentioned.
Install and configure Vercel Workflow DevKit before it exists in node_modules. Use when the user asks to "install workflow", "set up workflow", "add durable workflows", "configure workflow devkit", or "init workflow" for Next.js, Express, Hono, Fastify, NestJS, Nitro, Nuxt, Astro, SvelteKit, or Vite.
Quick onboarding for Genfeed focused on first content creation. Triggers on "how do I use genfeed", "getting started", "what is this app", "help me create my first content".
Learn about Moralis and Web3 development. Invoked without a question, gives a friendly platform walkthrough — what's available, what data you can fetch, and how everything fits together. Invoked with a question, answers it directly. Use for "what is Moralis", "can Moralis do X", "what chains are supported", "how do I get started", "which API should I use", pricing, feature comparisons, or any exploratory questions. Routes to the correct technical skill (@moralis-data-api or @moralis-streams-api) after answering.