Use when the user asks for a README, a GitHub front page, an open source library landing page, or a documentation homepage for a repository. Writes the README as a front door that orients readers and routes them to the right deeper docs — not a tutorial, not a full reference manual, not a conceptual essay. Use a different diataxis skill when the request is specifically for a step-by-step lesson, a task guide, API details, or conceptual background.
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Write or rewrite a repository README as the front door to a project.
This skill uses Diátaxis principles, but does not force the README to become a tutorial, how-to, reference, or explanation page. Instead, it makes the README a landing page that orients the reader and routes them to the right documentation.
Use this skill when the user asks for:
Use a different skill when the request is specifically for:
diataxis:tutorialdiataxis:how-todiataxis:referencediataxis:explanationHelp the reader answer, quickly:
Prefer this structure, adapting as needed:
The first screenful should tell the reader:
The quickstart can borrow the shape of a tutorial, but it must stay compact.
Good quickstart characteristics:
If the quickstart becomes long, split it into a real tutorial and link to it.
Always orient readers with a short map such as:
Produce a README that:
Before returning, verify: