Skip to main content
ClaudeWave
Skill4.1k estrellas del repoactualizado today

skill-creator

skill-creator guides the development and refinement of AgentSkills within the opensquilla framework. Use this skill when authoring new skills from scratch, improving existing skill documentation, auditing skills against specification standards, or restructuring skill directories. It provides structured principles for creating concise, contextually appropriate skills that balance specialized knowledge with efficient token usage.

Instalar en Claude Code
Copiar
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/opensquilla/opensquilla /tmp/skill-creator && cp -r /tmp/skill-creator/src/opensquilla/skills/bundled/skill-creator ~/.claude/skills/skill-creator
Después abre una sesión nueva de Claude Code; el skill carga automáticamente.

SKILL.md

# Skill Creator

This skill provides guidance for creating effective skills.

## About Skills

Skills are modular, self-contained packages that extend Codex's capabilities by providing
specialized knowledge, workflows, and tools. Think of them as "onboarding guides" for specific
domains or tasks—they transform Codex from a general-purpose agent into a specialized agent
equipped with procedural knowledge that no model can fully possess.

### What Skills Provide

1. Specialized workflows - Multi-step procedures for specific domains
2. Tool integrations - Instructions for working with specific file formats or APIs
3. Domain expertise - Company-specific knowledge, schemas, business logic
4. Bundled resources - Scripts, references, and assets for complex and repetitive tasks

## Core Principles

### Concise is Key

The context window is a public good. Skills share the context window with everything else Codex needs: system prompt, conversation history, other Skills' metadata, and the actual user request.

**Default assumption: Codex is already very smart.** Only add context Codex doesn't already have. Challenge each piece of information: "Does Codex really need this explanation?" and "Does this paragraph justify its token cost?"

Prefer concise examples over verbose explanations.

### Set Appropriate Degrees of Freedom

Match the level of specificity to the task's fragility and variability:

**High freedom (text-based instructions)**: Use when multiple approaches are valid, decisions depend on context, or heuristics guide the approach.

**Medium freedom (pseudocode or scripts with parameters)**: Use when a preferred pattern exists, some variation is acceptable, or configuration affects behavior.

**Low freedom (specific scripts, few parameters)**: Use when operations are fragile and error-prone, consistency is critical, or a specific sequence must be followed.

Think of Codex as exploring a path: a narrow bridge with cliffs needs specific guardrails (low freedom), while an open field allows many routes (high freedom).

### Anatomy of a Skill

Every skill consists of a required SKILL.md file and optional bundled resources:

```
skill-name/
├── SKILL.md (required)
│   ├── YAML frontmatter metadata (required)
│   │   ├── name: (required)
│   │   └── description: (required)
│   └── Markdown instructions (required)
└── Bundled Resources (optional)
    ├── scripts/          - Executable code (Python/Bash/etc.)
    ├── references/       - Documentation intended to be loaded into context as needed
    └── assets/           - Files used in output (templates, icons, fonts, etc.)
```

#### SKILL.md (required)

Every SKILL.md consists of:

- **Frontmatter** (YAML): Contains `name` and `description` fields. These are the only fields that Codex reads to determine when the skill gets used, thus it is very important to be clear and comprehensive in describing what the skill is, and when it should be used.
- **Body** (Markdown): Instructions and guidance for using the skill. Only loaded AFTER the skill triggers (if at all).

#### Bundled Resources (optional)

##### Scripts (`scripts/`)

Executable code (Python/Bash/etc.) for tasks that require deterministic reliability or are repeatedly rewritten.

- **When to include**: When the same code is being rewritten repeatedly or deterministic reliability is needed
- **Example**: `scripts/rotate_pdf.py` for PDF rotation tasks
- **Benefits**: Token efficient, deterministic, may be executed without loading into context
- **Note**: Scripts may still need to be read by Codex for patching or environment-specific adjustments

##### References (`references/`)

Documentation and reference material intended to be loaded as needed into context to inform Codex's process and thinking.

- **When to include**: For documentation that Codex should reference while working
- **Examples**: `references/finance.md` for financial schemas, `references/mnda.md` for company NDA template, `references/policies.md` for company policies, `references/api_docs.md` for API specifications
- **Use cases**: Database schemas, API documentation, domain knowledge, company policies, detailed workflow guides
- **Benefits**: Keeps SKILL.md lean, loaded only when Codex determines it's needed
- **Best practice**: If files are large (>10k words), include grep search patterns in SKILL.md
- **Avoid duplication**: Information should live in either SKILL.md or references files, not both. Prefer references files for detailed information unless it's truly core to the skill—this keeps SKILL.md lean while making information discoverable without hogging the context window. Keep only essential procedural instructions and workflow guidance in SKILL.md; move detailed reference material, schemas, and examples to references files.

##### Assets (`assets/`)

Files not intended to be loaded into context, but rather used within the output Codex produces.

- **When to include**: When the skill needs files that will be used in the final output
- **Examples**: `assets/logo.png` for brand assets, `assets/slides.pptx` for PowerPoint templates, `assets/frontend-template/` for HTML/React boilerplate, `assets/font.ttf` for typography
- **Use cases**: Templates, images, icons, boilerplate code, fonts, sample documents that get copied or modified
- **Benefits**: Separates output resources from documentation, enables Codex to use files without loading them into context

#### What to Not Include in a Skill

A skill should only contain essential files that directly support its functionality. Do NOT create extraneous documentation or auxiliary files, including:

- README.md
- INSTALLATION_GUIDE.md
- QUICK_REFERENCE.md
- CHANGELOG.md
- etc.

The skill should only contain the information needed for an AI agent to do the job at hand. It should not contain auxiliary context about the process that went into creating it, setup and testing procedures, user-facing documentation, etc. Creating additional documentation files just adds clutter and co
advanced-dubbing-studioSkill

Submit audio or video for multilingual dubbing, poll status, and download dubbed audio. Use when the user asks for dubbing, 多语言配音, 视频翻译配音, 译制片, or wants a source clip dubbed into another language.

ai-video-scriptSkill

Generate a structured short-video shooting script from a topic. Emits a strict, machine-parseable shot list (3 shots by default) with image prompt + video prompt + voiceover + on-screen text per shot. Trigger when the user asks for a video script, 分镜, 短视频文案, AI视频, 短剧脚本, or wants visual prompts ready for image/video generation.

cronSkill

Use when the user asks to schedule recurring tasks, one-off reminders, timers, or cron-style jobs through the OpenSquilla cron tool.

deep-researchSkill

Multi-round research with explicit methodology, evidence tracking, and citation-tagged synthesis. Trigger on 'deep dive', 'research report', 'literature review', 'investigate X across sources', 'multi-round investigation'. Distinct from the `summarize` skill, which is a single-pass condensation; this skill maintains a state file across iterations, tracks coverage, and produces a long-form report with per-claim citations. Three execution stages: plan (scope into sub-questions), iterate (record evidence per round), compile (synthesize report). The skill itself does not fetch the web — it tells the host agent which fetches to perform via OpenSquilla's existing web tools, and records what comes back.

docxSkill

Read, edit, or create Microsoft Word `.docx` files. Trigger this skill whenever the user mentions a Word document, .docx file, contract, report, brief, memo, or asks to extract text, modify an existing doc, generate one from a brief, or audit tracked changes. Three execution paths: text-and-structure extraction, in-place edit-by-run (preserves styles), and create-from-scratch with python-docx. Falls back to OOXML unzip-and-patch for layout work python-docx cannot reach.

git-diffSkill

Capture the current git diff (staged, working-tree, or staged file list) as text. Direct shell call for workflows that need repository diffs without an LLM agent loop.

githubSkill

GitHub operations via `gh` CLI: issues, PRs, CI runs, code review, API queries. Use when: (1) checking PR status or CI, (2) creating/commenting on issues, (3) listing/filtering PRs or issues, (4) viewing run logs. NOT for: complex web UI interactions requiring manual browser flows (use browser tooling when available), bulk operations across many repos (script with gh api), or when gh auth is not configured.

history-explorerSkill

Query the per-turn DecisionEntry log for skill co-occurrence patterns, meta-skill usage stats, and the router fixture corpus. Returns a JSON summary suitable for downstream LLM consumption. Used by meta-skill-creator's harvest step but also useful standalone for 'which skills did I use most this week?'