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Found 5 Skills
WeCom to-do list query skill, which supports filtering by creation time and reminder time, as well as pagination. It is applicable to scenarios where users need to browse the to-do overview, such as when they say "Check my to-do list", "What to-dos do I have", "What are my to-dos this week", "What to-dos are there recently", "Check my to-dos", "List all to-dos", etc. Note: This skill only returns to-do summary information (excluding content and assignees). If you need complete details, please use it together with wecomcli-get-todo-detail.
Forces exhaustive problem-solving using corporate PUA rhetoric and structured debugging methodology. MUST trigger when: (1) any task has failed 2+ times or you're stuck in a loop tweaking the same approach; (2) you're about to say 'I cannot', suggest the user do something manually, or blame the environment without verifying; (3) you catch yourself being passive — not searching, not reading source, not verifying, just waiting for instructions; (4) user expresses frustration in ANY form: 'try harder', 'stop giving up', 'figure it out', 'why isn't this working', 'again???', or any similar sentiment even if phrased differently. Also trigger when facing complex multi-step debugging, environment issues, config problems, or deployment failures where giving up early is tempting. Applies to ALL task types: code, config, research, writing, deployment, infrastructure, API integration. Do NOT trigger on first-attempt failures or when a known fix is already executing successfully.
Find past solutions before starting work - search errors you've fixed, files you've changed, similar questions you've asked, tool workflows that succeeded. Reduces web research and prevents redundant work.
Complete energy optimization API reference - Power Profiler workflows, timer/network/location/background APIs, iOS 26 BGContinuedProcessingTask, MetricKit monitoring, with all WWDC code examples
Use when you need to generate many creative options before systematically narrowing to the best choices. Invoke when exploring product ideas, solving open-ended problems, generating strategic alternatives, developing research questions, designing experiments, or when you need both breadth (many ideas) and rigor (principled selection). Use when user mentions brainstorming, ideation, divergent thinking, generating options, or evaluating alternatives.