From partme-ai-full-stack-skills
Creates animated GIFs optimized for Slack using Python and PIL, with GIFBuilder for frames, validators for constraints, and ImageDraw primitives for graphics.
npx claudepluginhub partme-ai/full-stack-skills --plugin t2ui-skillsThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
A toolkit providing utilities and knowledge for creating animated GIFs optimized for Slack.
Creates isolated Git worktrees for feature branches with prioritized directory selection, gitignore safety checks, auto project setup for Node/Python/Rust/Go, and baseline verification.
Executes implementation plans in current session by dispatching fresh subagents per independent task, with two-stage reviews: spec compliance then code quality.
Dispatches parallel agents to independently tackle 2+ tasks like separate test failures or subsystems without shared state or dependencies.
A toolkit providing utilities and knowledge for creating animated GIFs optimized for Slack.
Dimensions:
Parameters:
from core.gif_builder import GIFBuilder
from core.validators import validate_gif
from PIL import Image, ImageDraw
# 1. Create builder
builder = GIFBuilder(width=128, height=128, fps=10)
# 2. Generate frames
for i in range(12):
frame = Image.new('RGB', (128, 128), (240, 248, 255))
draw = ImageDraw.Draw(frame)
# Draw your animation using PIL primitives
builder.add_frame(frame)
# 3. Save with optimization
builder.save('output.gif', num_colors=48, optimize_for_emoji=True)
# 4. Validate before uploading
passes, info = validate_gif('output.gif', is_emoji=True, verbose=True)
assert passes, f"GIF failed validation: {info}"
If a user uploads an image, consider whether they want to:
Load and work with images using PIL:
from PIL import Image
uploaded = Image.open('file.png')
# Use directly, or just as reference for colors/style
When drawing graphics from scratch, use PIL ImageDraw primitives:
from PIL import ImageDraw
draw = ImageDraw.Draw(frame)
# Circles/ovals
draw.ellipse([x1, y1, x2, y2], fill=(r, g, b), outline=(r, g, b), width=3)
# Stars, triangles, any polygon
points = [(x1, y1), (x2, y2), (x3, y3), ...]
draw.polygon(points, fill=(r, g, b), outline=(r, g, b), width=3)
# Lines
draw.line([(x1, y1), (x2, y2)], fill=(r, g, b), width=5)
# Rectangles
draw.rectangle([x1, y1, x2, y2], fill=(r, g, b), outline=(r, g, b), width=3)
Don't use: Emoji fonts (unreliable across platforms) or assume pre-packaged graphics exist in this skill.
Graphics should look polished and creative, not basic. Here's how:
Use thicker lines - Always set width=2 or higher for outlines and lines. Thin lines (width=1) look choppy and amateurish.
Add visual depth:
create_gradient_background)Make shapes more interesting:
Pay attention to colors:
For complex shapes (hearts, snowflakes, etc.):
Be creative and detailed! A good Slack GIF should look polished, not like placeholder graphics.
core.gif_builder)Assembles frames and optimizes for Slack:
builder = GIFBuilder(width=128, height=128, fps=10)
builder.add_frame(frame) # Add PIL Image
builder.add_frames(frames) # Add list of frames
builder.save('out.gif', num_colors=48, optimize_for_emoji=True, remove_duplicates=True)
core.validators)Check if GIF meets Slack requirements:
from core.validators import validate_gif, is_slack_ready
# Detailed validation
passes, info = validate_gif('my.gif', is_emoji=True, verbose=True)
# Quick check
if is_slack_ready('my.gif'):
print("Ready!")
core.easing)Smooth motion instead of linear:
from core.easing import interpolate
# Progress from 0.0 to 1.0
t = i / (num_frames - 1)
# Apply easing
y = interpolate(start=0, end=400, t=t, easing='ease_out')
# Available: linear, ease_in, ease_out, ease_in_out,
# bounce_out, elastic_out, back_out
core.frame_composer)Convenience functions for common needs:
from core.frame_composer import (
create_blank_frame, # Solid color background
create_gradient_background, # Vertical gradient
draw_circle, # Helper for circles
draw_text, # Simple text rendering
draw_star # 5-pointed star
)
Offset object position with oscillation:
math.sin() or math.cos() with frame indexScale object size rhythmically:
math.sin(t * frequency * 2 * math.pi) for smooth pulseObject falls and bounces:
interpolate() with easing='bounce_out' for landingeasing='ease_in' for falling (accelerating)Rotate object around center:
image.rotate(angle, resample=Image.BICUBIC)Gradually appear or disappear:
Image.blend(image1, image2, alpha)Move object from off-screen to position:
interpolate() with easing='ease_out' for smooth stopeasing='back_out'Scale and position for zoom effect:
Create particles radiating outward:
x += vx, y += vyvy += gravity_constantOnly when asked to make the file size smaller, implement a few of the following methods:
num_colors=48 instead of 128remove_duplicates=True in save()optimize_for_emoji=True auto-optimizes# Maximum optimization for emoji
builder.save(
'emoji.gif',
num_colors=48,
optimize_for_emoji=True,
remove_duplicates=True
)
pip install pillow imageio numpy