skill-writer
- Repo stars 100,139
- Author updated Live
- Author repo pytorch
- Domain
- Design
- Compatible agents
-
- Claude Code
- Cursor
- Cline
- Codex
- Windsurf
- Gemini CLI
- +20
- Trust score
- 85 / 100 · community maintained
- Author / version / license
- @pytorch · no license declared
- Token usage
- Lean
- Setup complexity
- Guided setup
- External API key
- Not required
- Operating systems
- Unspecified (assume cross-platform)
- Runtime requirements
- Python
- Permissions
-
- Read-only
- Write / modify
- Shell exec
- Network behavior
- Local-only
- Install commands
- 26 variants
Profile is derived at build time from SKILL.md and install vectors. Subject to drift from author intent.
Heads up: 未限定 allowed-tools,默认拥有全部工具权限。; 上游仓库已 215 天未更新,可能与最新 agent 行为不一致。
---
name: skill-writer
description: Guide users through creating Agent Skills for Claude Code. Use when the user wants to create, wr…
category: design
runtime: Python
---
# skill-writer output preview
## PART A: Task fit
- Use case: Guide users through creating Agent Skills for Claude Code. Use when the user wants to create, write, author, or design a new Skill, or needs help with SKILL.md files, frontmatter, or skill structure..
- Inputs: target material, constraints, expected output, and acceptance criteria.
- Evidence boundary: follow “When to use this Skill / Instructions / Step 1: Determine Skill scope” and do not present inference as author intent.
## PART B: Execution result
- **01** The card summarizes the use case; runtime output centers on “Guide users through creating Agent Skills for Claude Code. Use when the user wants to create, write, author, or design a new Skill, or needs help with SKILL.md files, frontmatter, or skill structure.”.
- **02** When the source has headings, the agent prioritizes “When to use this Skill / Instructions / Step 1: Determine Skill scope” so the result follows the author’s structure.
- **03** Typical output includes task judgment, concrete steps, required commands or file edits, validation, and follow-up options.
- **04** Risk context follows the fingerprint: read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.
## Running Rules
- read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.
- Validate with a small sample before expanding scope.
- Return the result, validation criteria, and next iteration options. The source does not require a stable slash command. After installation, invoke the skill by name and describe the task.
Name target files or source material, expected output, forbidden changes, and whether network or shell access is allowed. Permission fingerprint: read files, write/modify files, run shell commands.
Start with a small task and check whether the result follows “When to use this Skill / Instructions / Step 1: Determine Skill scope”. Inspect diffs, logs, previews, or tests before expanding scope.
Confirm the final output includes a concrete result, evidence, and next action. If it stays generic, tighten inputs, boundaries, and acceptance criteria.
---
name: skill-writer
description: Guide users through creating Agent Skills for Claude Code. Use when the user wants to create, wr…
category: design
source: pytorch/pytorch
---
# skill-writer
## When to use
- Guide users through creating Agent Skills for Claude Code. Use when the user wants to create, write, author, or design…
- Use it when the task has clear inputs, repeatable steps, and validation criteria.
## What to provide
- Target material, scope, expected result, and forbidden changes.
- Whether network, commands, file writes, or external services are allowed.
## Execution rules
- Organize steps around “When to use this Skill / Instructions / Step 1: Determine Skill scope” and keep inference separate from source facts.
- read files, write/modify files, run shell commands; mostly runs locally; usually needs no extra API key.
- Validate with a small sample before expanding the task.
## Output requirements
- Return the deliverable, key evidence, validation method, and next action.
- Mark missing information as unknown; do not invent commands, platforms, or dependencies. The author source anchors workflow facts; repository files anchor sources and commands; Fluxly only adds fit, limitations, and quality judgment.
skill "skill-writer" {
input -> user goal + target files + boundaries + acceptance criteria
context -> When to use this Skill / Instructions / Step 1: Determine Skill scope
rules -> SKILL.md triggers / order / output contract
runtime -> Python | read files, write/modify files, run shell commands | mostly runs locally
guardrails -> usually needs no extra API key + small-sample validation + diff/log review
output -> copyable result + checklist + next iteration
} Skill Writer
This Skill helps you create well-structured Agent Skills for Claude Code that follow best practices and validation requirements.
When to use this Skill
Use this Skill when:
- Creating a new Agent Skill
- Writing or updating SKILL.md files
- Designing skill structure and frontmatter
- Troubleshooting skill discovery issues
- Converting existing prompts or workflows into Skills
Instructions
Step 1: Determine Skill scope
First, understand what the Skill should do:
Ask clarifying questions:
- What specific capability should this Skill provide?
- When should Claude use this Skill?
- What tools or resources does it need?
- Is this for personal use or team sharing?
Keep it focused: One Skill = one capability
- Good: "PDF form filling", "Excel data analysis"
- Too broad: "Document processing", "Data tools"
Step 2: Choose Skill location
Determine where to create the Skill:
Personal Skills (~/.claude/skills/):
- Individual workflows and preferences
- Experimental Skills
- Personal productivity tools
Project Skills (.claude/skills/):
- Team workflows and conventions
- Project-specific expertise
- Shared utilities (committed to git)
Step 3: Create Skill structure
Create the directory and files:
# Personal
mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills/skill-name
# Project
mkdir -p .claude/skills/skill-name
For multi-file Skills:
skill-name/
├── SKILL.md (required)
├── reference.md (optional)
├── examples.md (optional)
├── scripts/
│ └── helper.py (optional)
└── templates/
└── template.txt (optional)
Step 4: Write SKILL.md frontmatter
Create YAML frontmatter with required fields:
---
name: skill-name
description: Brief description of what this does and when to use it
---
Field requirements:
name:
- Lowercase letters, numbers, hyphens only
- Max 64 characters
- Must match directory name
- Good:
pdf-processor,git-commit-helper - Bad:
PDF_Processor,Git Commits!
description:
- Max 1024 characters
- Include BOTH what it does AND when to use it
- Use specific trigger words users would say
- Mention file types, operations, and context
Optional frontmatter fields:
- allowed-tools: Restrict tool access (comma-separated list)
Use for:allowed-tools: Read, Grep, Glob- Read-only Skills
- Security-sensitive workflows
- Limited-scope operations
Step 5: Write effective descriptions
The description is critical for Claude to discover your Skill.
Formula: [What it does] + [When to use it] + [Key triggers]
Examples:
✅ Good:
description: Extract text and tables from PDF files, fill forms, merge documents. Use when working with PDF files or when the user mentions PDFs, forms, or document extraction.
✅ Good:
description: Analyze Excel spreadsheets, create pivot tables, and generate charts. Use when working with Excel files, spreadsheets, or analyzing tabular data in .xlsx format.
❌ Too vague:
description: Helps with documents
description: For data analysis
Tips:
- Include specific file extensions (.pdf, .xlsx, .json)
- Mention common user phrases ("analyze", "extract", "generate")
- List concrete operations (not generic verbs)
- Add context clues ("Use when...", "For...")
Step 6: Structure the Skill content
Use clear Markdown sections:
# Skill Name
Brief overview of what this Skill does.
## Quick start
Provide a simple example to get started immediately.
## Instructions
Step-by-step guidance for Claude:
1. First step with clear action
2. Second step with expected outcome
3. Handle edge cases
## Examples
Show concrete usage examples with code or commands.
## Best practices
- Key conventions to follow
- Common pitfalls to avoid
- When to use vs. not use
## Requirements
List any dependencies or prerequisites:
```bash
pip install package-name
Advanced usage
For complex scenarios, see reference.md.
### Step 7: Add supporting files (optional)
Create additional files for progressive disclosure:
**reference.md**: Detailed API docs, advanced options
**examples.md**: Extended examples and use cases
**scripts/**: Helper scripts and utilities
**templates/**: File templates or boilerplate
Reference them from SKILL.md:
```markdown
For advanced usage, see [reference.md](reference.md).
Run the helper script:
\`\`\`bash
python scripts/helper.py input.txt
\`\`\`
Step 8: Validate the Skill
Check these requirements:
✅ File structure:
- SKILL.md exists in correct location
- Directory name matches frontmatter
name
✅ YAML frontmatter:
- Opening
---on line 1 - Closing
---before content - Valid YAML (no tabs, correct indentation)
-
namefollows naming rules -
descriptionis specific and < 1024 chars
✅ Content quality:
- Clear instructions for Claude
- Concrete examples provided
- Edge cases handled
- Dependencies listed (if any)
✅ Testing:
- Description matches user questions
- Skill activates on relevant queries
- Instructions are clear and actionable
Step 9: Test the Skill
Restart Claude Code (if running) to load the Skill
Ask relevant questions that match the description:
Can you help me extract text from this PDF?Verify activation: Claude should use the Skill automatically
Check behavior: Confirm Claude follows the instructions correctly
Step 10: Debug if needed
If Claude doesn't use the Skill:
Make description more specific:
- Add trigger words
- Include file types
- Mention common user phrases
Check file location:
ls ~/.claude/skills/skill-name/SKILL.md ls .claude/skills/skill-name/SKILL.mdValidate YAML:
cat SKILL.md | head -n 10Run debug mode:
claude --debug
Common patterns
Read-only Skill
---
name: code-reader
description: Read and analyze code without making changes. Use for code review, understanding codebases, or documentation.
allowed-tools: Read, Grep, Glob
---
Script-based Skill
---
name: data-processor
description: Process CSV and JSON data files with Python scripts. Use when analyzing data files or transforming datasets.
---
# Data Processor
## Instructions
1. Use the processing script:
\`\`\`bash
python scripts/process.py input.csv --output results.json
\`\`\`
2. Validate output with:
\`\`\`bash
python scripts/validate.py results.json
\`\`\`
Multi-file Skill with progressive disclosure
---
name: api-designer
description: Design REST APIs following best practices. Use when creating API endpoints, designing routes, or planning API architecture.
---
# API Designer
Quick start: See [examples.md](examples.md)
Detailed reference: See [reference.md](reference.md)
## Instructions
1. Gather requirements
2. Design endpoints (see examples.md)
3. Document with OpenAPI spec
4. Review against best practices (see reference.md)
Best practices for Skill authors
- One Skill, one purpose: Don't create mega-Skills
- Specific descriptions: Include trigger words users will say
- Clear instructions: Write for Claude, not humans
- Concrete examples: Show real code, not pseudocode
- List dependencies: Mention required packages in description
- Test with teammates: Verify activation and clarity
- Version your Skills: Document changes in content
- Use progressive disclosure: Put advanced details in separate files
Validation checklist
Before finalizing a Skill, verify:
- Name is lowercase, hyphens only, max 64 chars
- Description is specific and < 1024 chars
- Description includes "what" and "when"
- YAML frontmatter is valid
- Instructions are step-by-step
- Examples are concrete and realistic
- Dependencies are documented
- File paths use forward slashes
- Skill activates on relevant queries
- Claude follows instructions correctly
Troubleshooting
Skill doesn't activate:
- Make description more specific with trigger words
- Include file types and operations in description
- Add "Use when..." clause with user phrases
Multiple Skills conflict:
- Make descriptions more distinct
- Use different trigger words
- Narrow the scope of each Skill
Skill has errors:
- Check YAML syntax (no tabs, proper indentation)
- Verify file paths (use forward slashes)
- Ensure scripts have execute permissions
- List all dependencies
Examples
See the documentation for complete examples:
- Simple single-file Skill (commit-helper)
- Skill with tool permissions (code-reviewer)
- Multi-file Skill (pdf-processing)
Output format
When creating a Skill, I will:
- Ask clarifying questions about scope and requirements
- Suggest a Skill name and location
- Create the SKILL.md file with proper frontmatter
- Include clear instructions and examples
- Add supporting files if needed
- Provide testing instructions
- Validate against all requirements
The result will be a complete, working Skill that follows all best practices and validation rules.
Decide Fit First
Design Intent
How To Use It
Boundaries And Review