skills/rag-implementation/SKILL.md
Build Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) systems for LLM applications with vector databases and semantic search. Use when implementing knowledge-grounded AI, building document Q&A systems, or integrating LLMs with external knowledge bases.
npx skillsauth add ruanmalvao-web/lp rag-implementationInstall 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.
Master Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) to build LLM applications that provide accurate, grounded responses using external knowledge sources.
Purpose: Store and retrieve document embeddings efficiently
Options:
Purpose: Convert text to numerical vectors for similarity search
Models:
Approaches:
Purpose: Improve retrieval quality by reordering results
Methods:
from langchain.document_loaders import DirectoryLoader
from langchain.text_splitters import RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter
from langchain.embeddings import OpenAIEmbeddings
from langchain.vectorstores import Chroma
from langchain.chains import RetrievalQA
from langchain.llms import OpenAI
# 1. Load documents
loader = DirectoryLoader('./docs', glob="**/*.txt")
documents = loader.load()
# 2. Split into chunks
text_splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(
chunk_size=1000,
chunk_overlap=200,
length_function=len
)
chunks = text_splitter.split_documents(documents)
# 3. Create embeddings and vector store
embeddings = OpenAIEmbeddings()
vectorstore = Chroma.from_documents(chunks, embeddings)
# 4. Create retrieval chain
qa_chain = RetrievalQA.from_chain_type(
llm=OpenAI(),
chain_type="stuff",
retriever=vectorstore.as_retriever(search_kwargs={"k": 4}),
return_source_documents=True
)
# 5. Query
result = qa_chain({"query": "What are the main features?"})
print(result['result'])
print(result['source_documents'])
from langchain.retrievers import BM25Retriever, EnsembleRetriever
# Sparse retriever (BM25)
bm25_retriever = BM25Retriever.from_documents(chunks)
bm25_retriever.k = 5
# Dense retriever (embeddings)
embedding_retriever = vectorstore.as_retriever(search_kwargs={"k": 5})
# Combine with weights
ensemble_retriever = EnsembleRetriever(
retrievers=[bm25_retriever, embedding_retriever],
weights=[0.3, 0.7]
)
from langchain.retrievers.multi_query import MultiQueryRetriever
# Generate multiple query perspectives
retriever = MultiQueryRetriever.from_llm(
retriever=vectorstore.as_retriever(),
llm=OpenAI()
)
# Single query → multiple variations → combined results
results = retriever.get_relevant_documents("What is the main topic?")
from langchain.retrievers import ContextualCompressionRetriever
from langchain.retrievers.document_compressors import LLMChainExtractor
compressor = LLMChainExtractor.from_llm(llm)
compression_retriever = ContextualCompressionRetriever(
base_compressor=compressor,
base_retriever=vectorstore.as_retriever()
)
# Returns only relevant parts of documents
compressed_docs = compression_retriever.get_relevant_documents("query")
from langchain.retrievers import ParentDocumentRetriever
from langchain.storage import InMemoryStore
# Store for parent documents
store = InMemoryStore()
# Small chunks for retrieval, large chunks for context
child_splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=400)
parent_splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(chunk_size=2000)
retriever = ParentDocumentRetriever(
vectorstore=vectorstore,
docstore=store,
child_splitter=child_splitter,
parent_splitter=parent_splitter
)
from langchain.text_splitters import RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter
splitter = RecursiveCharacterTextSplitter(
chunk_size=1000,
chunk_overlap=200,
length_function=len,
separators=["\n\n", "\n", " ", ""] # Try these in order
)
from langchain.text_splitters import TokenTextSplitter
splitter = TokenTextSplitter(
chunk_size=512,
chunk_overlap=50
)
from langchain.text_splitters import SemanticChunker
splitter = SemanticChunker(
embeddings=OpenAIEmbeddings(),
breakpoint_threshold_type="percentile"
)
from langchain.text_splitters import MarkdownHeaderTextSplitter
headers_to_split_on = [
("#", "Header 1"),
("##", "Header 2"),
("###", "Header 3"),
]
splitter = MarkdownHeaderTextSplitter(headers_to_split_on=headers_to_split_on)
import pinecone
from langchain.vectorstores import Pinecone
pinecone.init(api_key="your-api-key", environment="us-west1-gcp")
index = pinecone.Index("your-index-name")
vectorstore = Pinecone(index, embeddings.embed_query, "text")
import weaviate
from langchain.vectorstores import Weaviate
client = weaviate.Client("http://localhost:8080")
vectorstore = Weaviate(client, "Document", "content", embeddings)
from langchain.vectorstores import Chroma
vectorstore = Chroma(
collection_name="my_collection",
embedding_function=embeddings,
persist_directory="./chroma_db"
)
# Add metadata during indexing
chunks_with_metadata = []
for i, chunk in enumerate(chunks):
chunk.metadata = {
"source": chunk.metadata.get("source"),
"page": i,
"category": determine_category(chunk.page_content)
}
chunks_with_metadata.append(chunk)
# Filter during retrieval
results = vectorstore.similarity_search(
"query",
filter={"category": "technical"},
k=5
)
# Balance relevance with diversity
results = vectorstore.max_marginal_relevance_search(
"query",
k=5,
fetch_k=20, # Fetch 20, return top 5 diverse
lambda_mult=0.5 # 0=max diversity, 1=max relevance
)
from sentence_transformers import CrossEncoder
reranker = CrossEncoder('cross-encoder/ms-marco-MiniLM-L-6-v2')
# Get initial results
candidates = vectorstore.similarity_search("query", k=20)
# Rerank
pairs = [[query, doc.page_content] for doc in candidates]
scores = reranker.predict(pairs)
# Sort by score and take top k
reranked = sorted(zip(candidates, scores), key=lambda x: x[1], reverse=True)[:5]
prompt_template = """Use the following context to answer the question. If you cannot answer based on the context, say "I don't have enough information."
Context:
{context}
Question: {question}
Answer:"""
prompt_template = """Answer the question based on the context below. Include citations using [1], [2], etc.
Context:
{context}
Question: {question}
Answer (with citations):"""
prompt_template = """Answer the question using the context. Provide a confidence score (0-100%) for your answer.
Context:
{context}
Question: {question}
Answer:
Confidence:"""
def evaluate_rag_system(qa_chain, test_cases):
metrics = {
'accuracy': [],
'retrieval_quality': [],
'groundedness': []
}
for test in test_cases:
result = qa_chain({"query": test['question']})
# Check if answer matches expected
accuracy = calculate_accuracy(result['result'], test['expected'])
metrics['accuracy'].append(accuracy)
# Check if relevant docs were retrieved
retrieval_quality = evaluate_retrieved_docs(
result['source_documents'],
test['relevant_docs']
)
metrics['retrieval_quality'].append(retrieval_quality)
# Check if answer is grounded in context
groundedness = check_groundedness(
result['result'],
result['source_documents']
)
metrics['groundedness'].append(groundedness)
return {k: sum(v)/len(v) for k, v in metrics.items()}
tools
No-code automation democratizes workflow building. Zapier and Make (formerly Integromat) let non-developers automate business processes without writing code. But no-code doesn't mean no-complexity - these platforms have their own patterns, pitfalls, and breaking points. This skill covers when to use which platform, how to build reliable automations, and when to graduate to code-based solutions. Key insight: Zapier optimizes for simplicity and integrations (7000+ apps), Make optimizes for power
tools
This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for XSS vulnerabilities", "perform cross-site scripting attacks", "identify HTML injection flaws", "exploit client-side injection vulnerabilities", "steal cookies via XSS", or "bypass content security policies". It provides comprehensive techniques for detecting, exploiting, and understanding XSS and HTML injection attack vectors in web applications.
development
Comprehensive spreadsheet creation, editing, and analysis with support for formulas, formatting, data analysis, and visualization. When Claude needs to work with spreadsheets (.xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, .tsv, etc) for: (1) Creating new spreadsheets with formulas and formatting, (2) Reading or analyzing data, (3) Modify existing spreadsheets while preserving formulas, (4) Data analysis and visualization in spreadsheets, or (5) Recalculating formulas
tools
Publish articles to X/Twitter