Command Development
**Skill Description:** Command Development teaches how to create and configure slash commands in Claude Code, which are reusable Markdown-based prompts executed during interactive sessions. Use this skill when building custom workflows with YAML frontmatter configuration, dynamic arguments, bash execution, file references, user interaction patterns, and command organization in project or personal directories.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/anthropics/claude-code /tmp/command-development && cp -r /tmp/command-development/plugins/plugin-dev/skills/command-development ~/.claude/skills/command-developmentSKILL.md
# Command Development for Claude Code ## Overview Slash commands are frequently-used prompts defined as Markdown files that Claude executes during interactive sessions. Understanding command structure, frontmatter options, and dynamic features enables creating powerful, reusable workflows. **Key concepts:** - Markdown file format for commands - YAML frontmatter for configuration - Dynamic arguments and file references - Bash execution for context - Command organization and namespacing ## Command Basics ### What is a Slash Command? A slash command is a Markdown file containing a prompt that Claude executes when invoked. Commands provide: - **Reusability**: Define once, use repeatedly - **Consistency**: Standardize common workflows - **Sharing**: Distribute across team or projects - **Efficiency**: Quick access to complex prompts ### Critical: Commands are Instructions FOR Claude **Commands are written for agent consumption, not human consumption.** When a user invokes `/command-name`, the command content becomes Claude's instructions. Write commands as directives TO Claude about what to do, not as messages TO the user. **Correct approach (instructions for Claude):** ```markdown Review this code for security vulnerabilities including: - SQL injection - XSS attacks - Authentication issues Provide specific line numbers and severity ratings. ``` **Incorrect approach (messages to user):** ```markdown This command will review your code for security issues. You'll receive a report with vulnerability details. ``` The first example tells Claude what to do. The second tells the user what will happen but doesn't instruct Claude. Always use the first approach. ### Command Locations **Project commands** (shared with team): - Location: `.claude/commands/` - Scope: Available in specific project - Label: Shown as "(project)" in `/help` - Use for: Team workflows, project-specific tasks **Personal commands** (available everywhere): - Location: `~/.claude/commands/` - Scope: Available in all projects - Label: Shown as "(user)" in `/help` - Use for: Personal workflows, cross-project utilities **Plugin commands** (bundled with plugins): - Location: `plugin-name/commands/` - Scope: Available when plugin installed - Label: Shown as "(plugin-name)" in `/help` - Use for: Plugin-specific functionality ## File Format ### Basic Structure Commands are Markdown files with `.md` extension: ``` .claude/commands/ ├── review.md # /review command ├── test.md # /test command └── deploy.md # /deploy command ``` **Simple command:** ```markdown Review this code for security vulnerabilities including: - SQL injection - XSS attacks - Authentication bypass - Insecure data handling ``` No frontmatter needed for basic commands. ### With YAML Frontmatter Add configuration using YAML frontmatter: ```markdown --- description: Review code for security issues allowed-tools: Read, Grep, Bash(git:*) model: sonnet --- Review this code for security vulnerabilities... ``` ## YAML Frontmatter Fields ### description **Purpose:** Brief description shown in `/help` **Type:** String **Default:** First line of command prompt ```yaml --- description: Review pull request for code quality --- ``` **Best practice:** Clear, actionable description (under 60 characters) ### allowed-tools **Purpose:** Specify which tools command can use **Type:** String or Array **Default:** Inherits from conversation ```yaml --- allowed-tools: Read, Write, Edit, Bash(git:*) --- ``` **Patterns:** - `Read, Write, Edit` - Specific tools - `Bash(git:*)` - Bash with git commands only - `*` - All tools (rarely needed) **Use when:** Command requires specific tool access ### model **Purpose:** Specify model for command execution **Type:** String (sonnet, opus, haiku) **Default:** Inherits from conversation ```yaml --- model: haiku --- ``` **Use cases:** - `haiku` - Fast, simple commands - `sonnet` - Standard workflows - `opus` - Complex analysis ### argument-hint **Purpose:** Document expected arguments for autocomplete **Type:** String **Default:** None ```yaml --- argument-hint: [pr-number] [priority] [assignee] --- ``` **Benefits:** - Helps users understand command arguments - Improves command discovery - Documents command interface ### disable-model-invocation **Purpose:** Prevent SlashCommand tool from programmatically calling command **Type:** Boolean **Default:** false ```yaml --- disable-model-invocation: true --- ``` **Use when:** Command should only be manually invoked ## Dynamic Arguments ### Using $ARGUMENTS Capture all arguments as single string: ```markdown --- description: Fix issue by number argument-hint: [issue-number] --- Fix issue #$ARGUMENTS following our coding standards and best practices. ``` **Usage:** ``` > /fix-issue 123 > /fix-issue 456 ``` **Expands to:** ``` Fix issue #123 following our coding standards... Fix issue #456 following our coding standards... ``` ### Using Positional Arguments Capture individual arguments with `$1`, `$2`, `$3`, etc.: ```markdown --- description: Review PR with priority and assignee argument-hint: [pr-number] [priority] [assignee] --- Review pull request #$1 with priority level $2. After review, assign to $3 for follow-up. ``` **Usage:** ``` > /review-pr 123 high alice ``` **Expands to:** ``` Review pull request #123 with priority level high. After review, assign to alice for follow-up. ``` ### Combining Arguments Mix positional and remaining arguments: ```markdown Deploy $1 to $2 environment with options: $3 ``` **Usage:** ``` > /deploy api staging --force --skip-tests ``` **Expands to:** ``` Deploy api to staging environment with options: --force --skip-tests ``` ## File References ### Using @ Syntax Include file contents in command: ```markdown --- description: Review specific file argument-hint: [file-path] --- Review @$1 for: - Code quality - Best practices - Potential bugs ``` **Usage:** ``` > /review-file src/a
Commit, push, and open a PR
Find duplicate GitHub issues
Triage GitHub issues by analyzing and applying labels
Migrate prompts and code from Claude Sonnet 4.0, Sonnet 4.5, or Opus 4.1 to Opus 4.5. Use when the user wants to update their codebase, prompts, or API calls to use Opus 4.5. Handles model string updates and prompt adjustments for known Opus 4.5 behavioral differences. Does NOT migrate Haiku 4.5.
Create distinctive, production-grade frontend interfaces with high design quality. Use this skill when the user asks to build web components, pages, or applications. Generates creative, polished code that avoids generic AI aesthetics.
This skill should be used when the user asks to "create a hookify rule", "write a hook rule", "configure hookify", "add a hookify rule", or needs guidance on hookify rule syntax and patterns.
This skill should be used when the user asks to "create an agent", "add an agent", "write a subagent", "agent frontmatter", "when to use description", "agent examples", "agent tools", "agent colors", "autonomous agent", or needs guidance on agent structure, system prompts, triggering conditions, or agent development best practices for Claude Code plugins.
This skill should be used when the user asks to "create a hook", "add a PreToolUse/PostToolUse/Stop hook", "validate tool use", "implement prompt-based hooks", "use ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}", "set up event-driven automation", "block dangerous commands", or mentions hook events (PreToolUse, PostToolUse, Stop, SubagentStop, SessionStart, SessionEnd, UserPromptSubmit, PreCompact, Notification). Provides comprehensive guidance for creating and implementing Claude Code plugin hooks with focus on advanced prompt-based hooks API.