
Expert guidance for using the GitLab CLI (glab) to manage GitLab issues, merge requests, CI/CD pipelines, repositories, and other GitLab operations from the command line. Use this skill when the user needs to interact with GitLab resources or perform GitLab workflows.
Generate beautiful, self-contained HTML pages that visually explain systems, code changes, plans, and data. Use when the user asks for a diagram, architecture overview, diff review, plan review, project recap, comparison table, or any visual explanation of technical concepts. Also use proactively when you are about to render a complex ASCII table (4+ rows or 3+ columns) — present it as a styled HTML page instead.
Expert guidance for using the GitLab CLI (glab) to manage GitLab issues, merge requests, CI/CD pipelines, repositories, and other GitLab operations from the command line. Use this skill when the user needs to interact with GitLab resources or perform GitLab workflows.
--- name: reflect-solution description: Summarize WHAT WAS SHIPPED in a Claude Code session as a self-contained HTML slide deck — the elevator pitch (problem, solution, decisions, artifacts, verification, gaps), not a play-by-play of tool calls or debugging detours. Defaults to the current in-context session; optionally accepts a session ID or JSONL path. Renders directly in the reflect aesthetic — no delegation. Use when the user invokes /reflect-solution or asks for a recap deck of what change
--- name: reflect-tree description: Visualize a Claude Code session as a quest/skill tree — a navigable SVG graph where nodes are turns and edges show flow, with distinct visual encoding for normal flow, dead-ends, corrections, retries, reversals, and backtracking. Sibling to /reflect (which produces an incidents+recommendations dashboard); this one shows the journey itself. Defaults to the current in-context session; optionally accepts a session ID or JSONL path. Use when the user invokes /refl
--- name: reflect description: Analyze a Claude Code session for "wrong-turn" moments (corrections, retries, waste, reversals, dead-ends) and produce an interactive HTML dashboard with copy-able recommendations (CLAUDE.md rules, docs, scripts, hooks, memory entries, sub-skills, etc.) that would help future agents reach the goal faster. Defaults to reflecting on the current in-context session; optionally accepts a session ID or JSONL path. Use when the user invokes /reflect or asks to learn from
This skill should be used when the user wants to manage Git worktrees - creating worktrees from local or remote branches, listing active worktrees with details, deleting worktrees, or switching between worktrees. Ideal for working on multiple branches simultaneously without stashing changes.
This skill should be used when users want to discover, browse, or audit cc-handbook marketplace plugins. Shows all available plugins with installation status, versions, and component breakdown (skills, agents, commands, MCP/LSP servers, hooks). Trigger phrases include "discover plugins", "list handbook plugins", "what plugins are available", "browse marketplace".
Understand implementation details of .NET code by decompiling assemblies. Use when you want to see how a .NET API works internally, inspect NuGet package source, view framework implementation, or understand compiled .NET binaries.
This skill should be used when crafting prompts for Nano Banana Pro (Gemini image generation). Use when users want help writing image generation prompts, need guidance on prompt structure, or want to optimize their prompts for better results.
Guide for creating effective skills. This skill should be used when users want to create a new skill (or update an existing skill) that extends Claude's capabilities with specialized knowledge, workflows, or tool integrations.
Review changed code for reuse, quality, and efficiency using three parallel disposable subagents. This skill should be used when the user says "review", "simplify", "code review", or wants a one-shot code review without persistent reviewers.
Analyze a task, propose an agent team composition with roles and responsibilities, and create the team after user confirmation. Use when the user says "team stack", "create a team", "set up agents for this", or describes a complex task that would benefit from multiple agents working together.
This skill should be used when the user wants to add components (commands, agents, skills, hooks, or MCP servers) to the Component Reference section of the website.
Review changed code for reuse, quality, and efficiency using a team of persistent named reviewers. This skill should be used when the user says "team review", "review with team", or wants parallel code review with persistent team members for follow-up questions. Similar to /subagent-review but reviewers persist after review.
Interact with Elasticsearch and Kibana via REST API using curl. Use when querying, indexing, managing indices, checking cluster health, writing aggregations, deploying dashboards, or troubleshooting Elasticsearch. Requires cluster URL and API key. Covers: search (Query DSL), CRUD operations, index management, mappings, aggregations, cluster health, ILM, ES|QL, Kibana API (dashboards, data views, saved objects), OpenTelemetry data patterns, and common troubleshooting patterns.
This skill should be used for Python scripting and Gemini image generation. Use when users ask to generate images, create AI art, edit images with AI, or run Python scripts with uv. Trigger phrases include "generate an image", "create a picture", "draw", "make an image of", "nano banana", or any image generation request.
This skill automates version bumping during the release process for the Claude Code Handbook monorepo. It should be used when the user requests to bump versions, prepare a release, or increment version numbers across the repository.
Analyze a task and produce an Architecture Decision Record with implementation steps.
This skill should be used when planning and tracking complex feature implementations that require systematic task decomposition. Use this skill to break down large features into manageable, well-documented tasks with clear dependencies, action items, and success criteria. The skill provides a structured template and methodology for iterative planning and tracking throughout implementation.
Guide spec-driven development workflow (Requirements → Design → Tasks → Implementation) with approval gates between phases. Use when user wants structured feature planning or says "use spec-driven" or "follow the spec process".
This skill should be used when investigating .NET project dependencies, understanding why packages are included, listing references, or auditing for outdated/vulnerable packages.
Generate a .NET code coverage report scoped to files changed in the current branch. Runs tests with coverage collection and produces filtered HTML reports.
Run script-like CSharp programs using dotnet run file.cs. Use this skill when users want to execute CSharp code directly, write one-liner scripts via stdin, or learn about run file directives.
This skill should be used when running .NET tests selectively with a build-first, test-targeted workflow. Use it for running tests with xUnit focus.
This skill should be used when working with Verify snapshot tests in .NET projects. Use when updating verified snapshots after intentional code changes, accepting new snapshots, discovering verify tests, or troubleshooting snapshot mismatches. Trigger phrases include "verify tests", "update snapshots", "accept snapshots", "verified files", ".verified.txt".
Access curated Fabric AI prompts for content processing, research, and writing.