Skills for Real Engineers. Straight from my .claude directory.
Create exercise directory structures with sections, problems, solutions, and explainers that pass linting. Use when user wants to scaffold exercises, create exercise stubs, or set up a new course section.
Generate multiple radically different interface designs for a module using parallel sub-agents. Use when user wants to design an API, explore interface options, compare module shapes, or mentions "design it twice".
Interactive QA session where user reports bugs or issues conversationally, and the agent files GitHub issues. Explores the codebase in the background for context and domain language. Use when user wants to report bugs, do QA, file issues conversationally, or mentions "QA session".
Create a detailed refactor plan with tiny commits via user interview, then file it as a GitHub issue. Use when user wants to plan a refactor, create a refactoring RFC, or break a refactor into safe incremental steps.
Triage a bug or issue by exploring the codebase to find root cause, then create a GitHub issue with a TDD-based fix plan. Use when user reports a bug, wants to file an issue, mentions "triage", or wants to investigate and plan a fix for a problem.
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My agent skills that I use every day to do real engineering - not vibe coding.
Developing real applications is hard. Approaches like GSD, BMAD, and Spec-Kit try to help by owning the process. But while doing so, they take away your control and make bugs in the process hard to resolve.
These skills are designed to be small, easy to adapt, and composable. They're based on decades of engineering experience. Hack around with them. Make them your own. Enjoy.
If you want to keep up with changes to these skills, and any new ones I create, you can join ~60,000 other devs on my newsletter:
npx skills@latest add mattpocock/skills
Pick the skills you want, and which coding agents you want to install them on.
Bam - you're ready to go.
I built these skills as a way to fix common failure modes I see with Claude Code, Codex, and other coding agents.
The Problem. The most common failure mode in software development is misalignment. You think the dev knows what you want. Then you see what they've built - and you realize it didn't understand you at all.
This is just the same in the AI age. There is a communication gap between you and the agent. The fix for this is a grilling session - getting the agent to ask you detailed questions about what you're building.
The Fix is to use:
/grill-me - for non-code uses/grill-with-docs - same as /grill-me, but adds more goodies (see below)These are my most popular skills. They help you align with the agent before you get started, and think deeply about the change you're making. Use them every time you want to make a change.
The Problem: At the start of a project, devs and the people they're building the software for (the domain experts) are usually speaking different languages.
The domain experts are speaking their language, and the devs are trying to translate it into code. They're often talking past each other.
I felt exactly the same tension with my agents. Agents are usually dropped into a project and asked to figure out the jargon as they go. This leads to incredible verbosity. Agents use 20 words where 1 will do.
The Fix for this is a shared language. It's a document that helps agents decode the jargon used in the project.
Here's an example CONTEXT.md, from my course-video-manager repo. Which one is easier to read?
This concision pays off session after session.
This is built into /grill-with-docs. It's a grilling session, but with two extra abilities:
CONTEXT.mdIt's hard to explain how powerful this is.
[!TIP] A shared language has many other benefits than reducing verbosity:
- Variables, functions and files are named consistently, using the shared language
- As a result, the codebase is easier to navigate for the agent
- The agent also spends fewer tokens on thinking, because it has access to a more concise language
Skills I use daily for code work.
npx claudepluginhub renanliberato/skillsUltra-compressed communication mode. Cuts 65% of output tokens (measured) while keeping full technical accuracy by speaking like a caveman.
Frontend design skill for UI/UX implementation
Memory compression system for Claude Code - persist context across sessions
Marketing skills for AI agents — conversion optimization, copywriting, SEO, paid ads, ad creative, and growth
Comprehensive UI/UX design plugin for mobile (iOS, Android, React Native) and web applications with design systems, accessibility, and modern patterns
Standalone image generation plugin using Nano Banana MCP server. Generates and edits images, icons, diagrams, patterns, and visual assets via Gemini image models. No Gemini CLI dependency required.