skills/writing-skills/SKILL.md
Creates, edits, and tests Claude skill files (SKILL.md) using TDD methodology with baseline pressure testing and rationalization defense. Use when writing a new skill, modifying an existing skill, optimizing a skill description for discovery (CSO), testing whether a skill triggers correctly, or structuring skill documentation. Enforces RED-GREEN-REFACTOR for process documentation.
npx skillsauth add shousper/claude-kit writing-skillsInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Writing skills IS Test-Driven Development applied to process documentation.
Personal skills live in agent-specific directories (~/.claude/skills for Claude Code, ~/.agents/skills/ for Codex)
You write test cases (pressure scenarios with subagents), watch them fail (baseline behavior), write the skill (documentation), watch tests pass (agents comply), and refactor (close loopholes).
Core principle: If you didn't watch an agent fail without the skill, you don't know if the skill teaches the right thing.
REQUIRED BACKGROUND: You MUST understand kit:tdd before using this skill. That skill defines the fundamental RED-GREEN-REFACTOR cycle. This skill adapts TDD to documentation.
Official guidance: For Anthropic's official skill authoring best practices, see anthropic-best-practices.md. This document provides additional patterns and guidelines that complement the TDD-focused approach in this skill.
Eval tooling: For quantitative eval running, benchmarking, and description optimization, use the official skill-creator plugin from Anthropic (anthropics/claude-plugins-official). This skill focuses on authoring craft (CSO, structure, rationalization defense); the official plugin provides the test harness (eval runner, grader, benchmark viewer).
A skill is a reference guide for proven techniques, patterns, or tools. Skills help future Claude instances find and apply effective approaches.
Skills are: Reusable techniques, patterns, tools, reference guides
Skills are NOT: Narratives about how you solved a problem once
| TDD Concept | Skill Creation | |-------------|----------------| | Test case | Pressure scenario with subagent | | Production code | Skill document (SKILL.md) | | Test fails (RED) | Agent violates rule without skill (baseline) | | Test passes (GREEN) | Agent complies with skill present | | Refactor | Close loopholes while maintaining compliance | | Write test first | Run baseline scenario BEFORE writing skill | | Watch it fail | Document exact rationalizations agent uses | | Minimal code | Write skill addressing those specific violations | | Watch it pass | Verify agent now complies | | Refactor cycle | Find new rationalizations → plug → re-verify |
The entire skill creation process follows RED-GREEN-REFACTOR.
Create when:
Don't create for:
Concrete method with steps to follow (condition-based-waiting, root-cause-tracing)
Way of thinking about problems (flatten-with-flags, test-invariants)
API docs, syntax guides, tool documentation (office docs)
skills/
skill-name/
SKILL.md # Main reference (required)
supporting-file.* # Only if needed
Flat namespace - all skills in one searchable namespace
Separate files for:
Keep inline:
Frontmatter (YAML):
name and descriptionname: Use letters, numbers, and hyphens only (no parentheses, special chars)description: Third-person, describes ONLY when to use (NOT what it does)
---
name: Skill-Name-With-Hyphens
description: Use when [specific triggering conditions and symptoms]
---
# Skill Name
## Overview
What is this? Core principle in 1-2 sentences.
## When to Use
[Small inline flowchart IF decision non-obvious]
Bullet list with SYMPTOMS and use cases
When NOT to use
## Core Pattern (for techniques/patterns)
Before/after code comparison
## Quick Reference
Table or bullets for scanning common operations
## Implementation
Inline code for simple patterns
Link to file for heavy reference or reusable tools
## Common Mistakes
What goes wrong + fixes
## Real-World Impact (optional)
Concrete results
Critical for discovery. See references/cso-guide.md for the full description optimization guide covering:
digraph when_flowchart {
"Need to show information?" [shape=diamond];
"Decision where I might go wrong?" [shape=diamond];
"Use markdown" [shape=box];
"Small inline flowchart" [shape=box];
"Need to show information?" -> "Decision where I might go wrong?" [label="yes"];
"Decision where I might go wrong?" -> "Small inline flowchart" [label="yes"];
"Decision where I might go wrong?" -> "Use markdown" [label="no"];
}
Use flowcharts ONLY for:
Never use flowcharts for:
See @graphviz-conventions.dot for graphviz style rules.
Visualizing for your human partner: Use render-graphs.js in this directory to render a skill's flowcharts to SVG:
./render-graphs.js ../some-skill # Each diagram separately
./render-graphs.js ../some-skill --combine # All diagrams in one SVG
One excellent example beats many mediocre ones
Choose most relevant language:
Good example:
Don't:
You're good at porting - one great example is enough.
defense-in-depth/
SKILL.md # Everything inline
When: All content fits, no heavy reference needed
condition-based-waiting/
SKILL.md # Overview + patterns
example.ts # Working helpers to adapt
When: Tool is reusable code, not just narrative
pptx/
SKILL.md # Overview + workflows
pptxgenjs.md # 600 lines API reference
ooxml.md # 500 lines XML structure
scripts/ # Executable tools
When: Reference material too large for inline
NO SKILL WITHOUT A FAILING TEST FIRST
This applies to NEW skills AND EDITS to existing skills.
Write skill before testing? Delete it. Start over. Edit skill without testing? Same violation.
No exceptions:
REQUIRED BACKGROUND: The kit:tdd skill explains why this matters. Same principles apply to documentation.
Different skill types need different test approaches:
Examples: TDD, verification-before-completion, designing-before-coding
Test with:
Success criteria: Agent follows rule under maximum pressure
Examples: condition-based-waiting, root-cause-tracing, defensive-programming
Test with:
Success criteria: Agent successfully applies technique to new scenario
Examples: reducing-complexity, information-hiding concepts
Test with:
Success criteria: Agent correctly identifies when/how to apply pattern
Examples: API documentation, command references, library guides
Test with:
Success criteria: Agent finds and correctly applies reference information
For discipline-enforcing skills, see references/rationalization-defense.md for:
Follow the TDD cycle:
Run pressure scenario with subagent WITHOUT the skill. Document exact behavior:
This is "watch the test fail" - you must see what agents naturally do before writing the skill.
Write skill that addresses those specific rationalizations. Don't add extra content for hypothetical cases.
Run same scenarios WITH skill. Agent should now comply.
Agent found new rationalization? Add explicit counter. Re-test until bulletproof.
Testing methodology: See @testing-skills-with-subagents.md for the complete testing methodology:
"In session 2025-10-03, we found empty projectDir caused..." Why bad: Too specific, not reusable
example-js.js, example-py.py, example-go.go Why bad: Mediocre quality, maintenance burden
step1 [label="import fs"];
step2 [label="read file"];
Why bad: Can't copy-paste, hard to read
helper1, helper2, step3, pattern4 Why bad: Labels should have semantic meaning
After writing ANY skill, you MUST STOP and complete the deployment process.
Do NOT:
The deployment checklist below is MANDATORY for EACH skill.
Deploying untested skills = deploying untested code. It's a violation of quality standards.
IMPORTANT: Use TodoWrite to create todos for EACH checklist item below.
RED Phase - Write Failing Test:
GREEN Phase - Write Minimal Skill:
REFACTOR Phase - Close Loopholes:
Quality Checks:
Deployment:
How future Claude finds your skill:
Optimize for this flow - put searchable terms early and often.
Creating skills IS TDD for process documentation.
Same Iron Law: No skill without failing test first. Same cycle: RED (baseline) → GREEN (write skill) → REFACTOR (close loopholes). Same benefits: Better quality, fewer surprises, bulletproof results.
If you follow TDD for code, follow it for skills. It's the same discipline applied to documentation.
development
Enforces project-specific coding conventions by loading language standards before writing code. Use when about to write, edit, modify, or generate Go, Rust, Python, Tailwind CSS, or HCL (Terraform/OpenTofu) files. Loads once per language per session and overrides default style with project conventions. DO NOT TRIGGER for languages other than Go, Rust, Python, Tailwind CSS, or HCL (Terraform/OpenTofu).
development
Creates detailed, bite-sized implementation plans with TDD structure, exact file paths, complete code, and test commands. Use when you have a spec, requirements, design doc, or feature request and need to plan before coding — especially for multi-step tasks, large features, or when handing off to another session. DO NOT TRIGGER when asked to write code directly or fix a simple bug.
testing
Removes git worktrees safely, cleans up associated branches, and pulls latest mainline after removal. Use when finished with a worktree, done with a branch, cleaning up after a merge or PR, abandoning work in a worktree, or when "git worktree list" shows stale entries. Checks for uncommitted changes, verifies no open PRs before branch deletion, and handles force-removal of locked worktrees.
development
Enforces fresh verification evidence before any completion or success claims. Use when about to say "done", "fixed", "tests pass", "build succeeds", or any synonym; before committing, creating PRs, or moving to the next task; before expressing satisfaction or positive statements about work state; and after agent delegation to independently verify results. Prevents unverified claims by requiring command execution, output inspection, and exit code confirmation.