.pi/agent/skills/find-skills/SKILL.md
Helps users discover and install agent skills when they ask questions like "how do I do X", "find a skill for X", "is there a skill that can...", or express interest in extending capabilities. This skill should be used when the user is looking for functionality that might exist as an installable skill.
npx skillsauth add popoffvg/dotfiles find-skillsInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
This skill helps you discover and install skills from the open agent skills ecosystem.
Use this skill when the user:
The Skills CLI (npx skills) is the package manager for the open agent skills ecosystem. Skills are modular packages that extend agent capabilities with specialized knowledge, workflows, and tools.
Key commands:
npx skills find [query] - Search for skills interactively or by keywordnpx skills add <package> - Install a skill from GitHub or other sourcesnpx skills check - Check for skill updatesnpx skills update - Update all installed skillsBrowse skills at: https://skills.sh/
When a user asks for help with something, identify:
Run the find command with a relevant query:
npx skills find [query]
For example:
npx skills find react performancenpx skills find pr reviewnpx skills find changelogThe command will return results like:
Install with npx skills add <owner/repo@skill>
vercel-labs/agent-skills@vercel-react-best-practices
└ https://skills.sh/vercel-labs/agent-skills/vercel-react-best-practices
When you find relevant skills, present them to the user with:
Example response:
I found a skill that might help! The "vercel-react-best-practices" skill provides
React and Next.js performance optimization guidelines from Vercel Engineering.
To install it:
npx skills add vercel-labs/agent-skills@vercel-react-best-practices
Learn more: https://skills.sh/vercel-labs/agent-skills/vercel-react-best-practices
If the user wants to proceed, you can install the skill for them:
npx skills add <owner/repo@skill> -g -y
The -g flag installs globally (user-level) and -y skips confirmation prompts.
When searching, consider these common categories:
| Category | Example Queries | | --------------- | ---------------------------------------- | | Web Development | react, nextjs, typescript, css, tailwind | | Testing | testing, jest, playwright, e2e | | DevOps | deploy, docker, kubernetes, ci-cd | | Documentation | docs, readme, changelog, api-docs | | Code Quality | review, lint, refactor, best-practices | | Design | ui, ux, design-system, accessibility | | Productivity | workflow, automation, git |
vercel-labs/agent-skills or ComposioHQ/awesome-claude-skillsIf no relevant skills exist:
npx skills initExample:
I searched for skills related to "xyz" but didn't find any matches.
I can still help you with this task directly! Would you like me to proceed?
If this is something you do often, you could create your own skill:
npx skills init my-xyz-skill
Eval checklist:
Test inputs:
Can change: search strategy, result presentation, skill matching heuristics, install instructions Cannot change: user confirmation before install, npx skills CLI as the tool, search-before-suggest principle Min sessions before eval: 5 Runs per experiment: 3
testing
Use when the user asks to create test sets, enumerate scenarios, generate edge cases, or draft a coverage matrix before implementation.
testing
Use when the user asks to review, audit, score, or validate test sets for missed cases before execution or merge.
tools
Test harness plugins in isolation using tmux panes. Runs MCP servers, unit tests, typecheck, and Claude plugin loading. Use when user says "test plugin", "check plugin", "run plugin tests", "validate plugin", or names a specific plugin to test.
development
Guide for designing integration and e2e tests using BDD (Behavior-Driven Development) methodology with Cucumber-style Given/When/Then scenarios. Use when writing or reviewing tests for any service, API, or component. Language-agnostic — covers scenario structure, step notation, assertion principles, async patterns, and common anti-patterns.