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ClaudeWave
Skill65 estrellas del repoactualizado 27d ago

monorepo

MUST use for ANY query mentioning packages, monorepo, workspace, catalog, turbo, turborepo, or pnpm in a multi-package context. MUST use when sharing config (ESLint, tsconfig, prettier) across packages, fixing build order between packages, adding new packages, scoping CI installs/caching to changed packages, or debugging pnpm catalog version resolution. This skill OWNS all cross-package coordination problems — even when they look like build, CI, config, or dependency issues. If two or more packages interact in the query, this skill applies. Takes priority over other skills when the problem spans package boundaries.

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git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/avibebuilder/claude-prime /tmp/monorepo && cp -r /tmp/monorepo/.claude/starter-skills/monorepo ~/.claude/skills/monorepo
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SKILL.md

# Monorepo

Project-specific patterns for pnpm workspaces + Turborepo.

## Architecture Decisions

### Workspace Organization
1. **Split apps from packages** — `apps/` for deployables, `packages/` for shared libraries.
2. **Namespace packages** — Prefix with `@org/` to avoid npm conflicts.
3. **Single lockfile** — `pnpm-lock.yaml` at root only. Never commit multiple lockfiles.
4. **No cross-package file access** — Never use `../` to reach into other packages; import via dependencies.

### Dependency Management
5. **Use `workspace:*` protocol** — Always for internal package dependencies.
6. **Hoist common devDependencies** — Shared tooling (TypeScript, ESLint) in root.
7. **Peer dependencies for frameworks** — React, Vue, etc. as peers to avoid version conflicts.
8. **Consider Catalogs (pnpm 9.5+)** — Centralize versions in `pnpm-workspace.yaml` for large repos.

### Turborepo Tasks
9. **Use `^` for build dependencies** — `"dependsOn": ["^build"]` for topological order.
10. **Always define `outputs`** — Without outputs, nothing gets cached.
11. **Mark dev servers as persistent** — `"persistent": true, "cache": false`.
12. **Be explicit about environment** — List all build-affecting vars in `env` or `globalEnv`.

## Gotchas

- Missing `outputs` in turbo.json silently disables caching for that task. The task runs every time and you won't get an error — just slow builds. Always verify outputs are configured.
- `pnpm install` does NOT respect `--filter` for installation — it always installs the entire workspace. Filtering only works for `pnpm run` and `pnpm exec`.
- `workspace:*` resolves to the CURRENT version of the local package, not "latest from npm". If the package has `"version": "0.0.0"`, published packages will have `"dependency": "0.0.0"` — set meaningful versions before publishing.
- Turborepo's `env` field in turbo.json uses GLOB patterns, not exact matches. `"env": ["API_*"]` captures `API_KEY`, `API_URL`, etc. Forgetting this causes over-invalidation.
- `turbo run build --filter=app-a` builds app-a AND all its workspace dependencies. If a dependency fails, app-a won't build. Check transitive deps.
- Adding a package to `packages/` requires running `pnpm install` before the workspace recognizes it. The new package also needs a valid `package.json` with `name` matching the workspace pattern.
- TypeScript project references (`references` in tsconfig.json) must match the workspace dependency graph. Mismatches cause type errors that only appear during `tsc --build`, not in IDE.
- `turbo.json`'s `globalDependencies` invalidates ALL tasks when listed files change. Don't put frequently-changed files here — use task-level `inputs` instead.
- Shared Tailwind configs need `@source` directives pointing to consuming packages' source directories, otherwise classes used in shared packages are purged.
- `pnpm deploy` (for production) copies a single package and its dependencies to a target directory. It does NOT run build scripts — build first, then deploy.
- Remote cache (Vercel or self-hosted) requires `outputs` to be correct. If outputs are wrong, cached artifacts will be incomplete and downstream tasks break silently.
- `persistent: true` tasks prevent `turbo run` from exiting. Don't include persistent tasks in CI pipelines unless they have a timeout.

## References

| When you need... | Read |
|------------------|------|
| workspace.yaml, workspace: protocol, filtering | [pnpm-workspace.md](./references/pnpm-workspace.md) |
| turbo.json schema, tasks, dependsOn | [turborepo.md](./references/turborepo.md) |
| Cache outputs/inputs, remote cache setup | [caching.md](./references/caching.md) |
| Directory layout, package naming, tsconfig | [structure.md](./references/structure.md) |
| Tailwind v4 shared theme package | [tailwind-v4.md](./references/tailwind-v4.md) |

## External Resources

- [pnpm Workspaces](https://pnpm.io/workspaces)
- [Turborepo Docs](https://turborepo.com/docs)
- [Configuring turbo.json](https://turborepo.com/docs/reference/configuration)
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Browser automation CLI for AI agents. Use when the user needs to interact with websites, including navigating pages, filling forms, clicking buttons, taking screenshots, extracting data, testing web apps, or automating any browser task. Triggers include requests to "open a website", "fill out a form", "click a button", "take a screenshot", "scrape data from a page", "test this web app", "login to a site", "automate browser actions", or any task requiring programmatic web interaction.

askSkill

Answer questions about code, architecture, and technical decisions — no implementation. Trigger on questions asking 'why', 'what does this do', 'what is the purpose of', 'explain', 'what's the difference', 'compare', or 'what are the tradeoffs' — even when referencing specific files, code snippets, or inline code. The key signal is the user wants to UNDERSTAND something, not change it. Do NOT trigger for requests to build, fix, plan, review, research, or add/modify code.

cookSkill

Implement, build, create, or add any feature, endpoint, page, component, or functionality. Use this skill whenever the user asks you to write new code or make code changes — whether it's adding an API endpoint, building a UI page, creating an export feature, wiring up a webhook, implementing a search/filter, or any other hands-on coding task. This is the default skill for all 'build this', 'add this', 'create this', 'wire up', 'implement' requests. Covers the full cycle: clarify requirements, plan if needed, write code, verify, and review. Do NOT use for pure research, debugging, documentation, or explanation — only when the user wants working code delivered.

create-docSkill

Use when the user wants to save knowledge as a file so others don't have to rediscover it — \"turn this into a doc\", \"write this up\", \"document how X works\", \"we figured this out and want to capture it\", \"nobody should have to figure this out again\". Covers any request to create or update durable written artifacts: onboarding guides, runbooks, ADRs, API docs, architecture notes, postmortems, changelogs, setup guides. The trigger: user wants knowledge captured in a file for future reference, not just a conversation. Do NOT use when still making decisions (→ give-plan), just asking for explanation without a file (→ ask), or writing code (→ cook).

diagnoseSkill

Investigate unexpected behavior and mysterious bugs. Use when the cause of a problem is unknown and the user needs to understand WHY something is happening — symptoms like: sudden unexplained changes in metrics or behavior, works locally but not in staging/production, inconsistent or intermittent failures, correct code producing wrong results, operations succeeding but having no effect, environment-specific failures, duplicate executions, stale data, or any \"why did this change?\" or \"why is this happening?\" situation. Covers infrastructure anomalies (cache hit rates dropping, latency spikes, queue behavior shifts) as well as code bugs. The key signal is confusion about root cause, not a request to implement a known fix. Do NOT use for feature requests, known fixes, planning, or documentation tasks.

discussSkill

Brainstorms and debates approaches, then drives toward an actionable decision. Use whenever someone needs a thinking partner for a decision they're facing: 'discuss', 'debate', 'brainstorm', 'weigh options', 'tradeoffs', 'should I do X or Y', 'help me decide', 'I'm torn between', 'sanity check my thinking', or 'what do you think about'. The user must be asking for help reasoning through a choice — not asking to build, fix, evaluate, plan, or modify something (even if the topic involves this skill itself). Picks the right decision lens, surfaces tradeoffs and blind spots, pushes back when reasoning is genuinely weak, and never implements.

docs-seekerSkill

Fetch up-to-date documentation for any library, framework, API, or service into context. Use when the user wants to look up API references, check function signatures or required fields, find feature-specific docs, or verify how an external tool actually works. Triggers for queries about third-party libraries like Stripe, SQLAlchemy, Tailwind, FastAPI, shadcn, Drizzle, Hono, Better Auth — any time the answer lives in official docs rather than in the project codebase. Use this instead of guessing from trained knowledge, which is stale.

fixSkill

Fix bugs and broken behavior when there is enough evidence to act on a repair path. Use for errors, crashes, incorrect results, API failures (500, 404, 403), CORS problems, database exceptions, broken rendering, duplicated or wrong data, off-by-one mistakes, timezone/date bugs, broken forms, config-caused runtime failures, and regressions. Trigger when the user wants the bug repaired and the conversation already contains a clear failing area, a reproducible failing test, a concrete error path, or a prior diagnosis to implement. Do NOT use for new features, pure explanation, architecture discussion, broad research, or bug reports where the main need is figuring out why the behavior happens — use diagnose for that.