Cherry-studio find-skills

Helps users discover and install agent skills when they ask questions like "how do I do X", "find a skill for X", "is there a skill that can...", or express interest in extending capabilities. This skill should be used when the user is looking for functionality that might exist as an installable skill.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/CherryHQ/cherry-studio
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/CherryHQ/cherry-studio "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/resources/skills/find-skills" ~/.claude/skills/cherryhq-cherry-studio-find-skills && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: resources/skills/find-skills/SKILL.md
source content

Find Skills

This skill helps you discover and install skills from the open agent skills ecosystem.

When to Use This Skill

Use this skill when the user:

  • Asks "how do I do X" where X might be a common task with an existing skill
  • Says "find a skill for X" or "is there a skill for X"
  • Asks "can you do X" where X is a specialized capability
  • Expresses interest in extending agent capabilities
  • Wants to search for tools, templates, or workflows
  • Mentions they wish they had help with a specific domain (design, testing, deployment, etc.)

What is the Skills CLI?

The Skills CLI (

npx skills
) is the package manager for the open agent skills ecosystem. Skills are modular packages that extend agent capabilities with specialized knowledge, workflows, and tools.

Key commands:

  • npx skills find [query]
    - Search for skills interactively or by keyword
  • npx skills add <package>
    - Install a skill from GitHub or other sources
  • npx skills check
    - Check for skill updates
  • npx skills update
    - Update all installed skills

Browse skills at: https://skills.sh/

Runtime Detection

Before running any

npx skills
command, check if
npx
is available:

which npx

If

npx
is not found, fall back to the bundled bun shipped with Cherry Studio. Cherry Studio sets the
CHERRY_STUDIO_BUN_PATH
environment variable pointing to its bundled bun binary. Use it as follows:

if [ -n "$CHERRY_STUDIO_BUN_PATH" ] && [ -x "$CHERRY_STUDIO_BUN_PATH" ]; then
  "$CHERRY_STUDIO_BUN_PATH" x skills <subcommand> [args]
else
  echo "Error: Neither npx nor bundled bun found. Install Node.js or run Cherry Studio's bun installer."
fi

For example,

npx skills find react
becomes
"$CHERRY_STUDIO_BUN_PATH" x skills find react
.

Always try

npx
first. Only use the bun fallback when npx is unavailable.

How to Help Users Find Skills

Step 1: Understand What They Need

When a user asks for help with something, identify:

  1. The domain (e.g., React, testing, design, deployment)
  2. The specific task (e.g., writing tests, creating animations, reviewing PRs)
  3. Whether this is a common enough task that a skill likely exists

Step 2: Search for Skills

Run the find command with a relevant query:

npx skills find [query]

For example:

  • User asks "how do I make my React app faster?" →
    npx skills find react performance
  • User asks "can you help me with PR reviews?" →
    npx skills find pr review
  • User asks "I need to create a changelog" →
    npx skills find changelog

The command will return results like:

Install with npx skills add <owner/repo@skill>

vercel-labs/agent-skills@vercel-react-best-practices
└ https://skills.sh/vercel-labs/agent-skills/vercel-react-best-practices

Step 3: Present Options to the User

When you find relevant skills, present them to the user with:

  1. The skill name and what it does
  2. The source repository link so the user can review the code
  3. The install command they can run

Example response:

I found a skill that might help! The "vercel-react-best-practices" skill provides
React and Next.js performance optimization guidelines from Vercel Engineering.

Source: https://skills.sh/vercel-labs/agent-skills/vercel-react-best-practices

To install it (after you've reviewed the source):
npx skills add vercel-labs/agent-skills@vercel-react-best-practices

Step 4: Install (Requires User Confirmation)

⚠️ Security: Skills are third-party code that runs with full agent permissions. A malicious skill could read, modify, or delete files in your project.

Before installing any skill you MUST:

  1. Show a security warning — tell the user that the skill is third-party code and will have access to their project files.
  2. Provide the source link so the user can review the skill's SKILL.md and any scripts it contains.
  3. Ask the user for explicit confirmation — do NOT run
    npx skills add
    until the user says "yes" or equivalent. Never install silently.

Only after the user confirms, run:

npx skills add <owner/repo@skill> -y

The

-y
flag is required for non-interactive execution, but the user confirmation step above ensures the user has reviewed and approved the install.

Skills are installed to the current project's

.claude/skills/
directory.

Common Skill Categories

When searching, consider these common categories:

CategoryExample Queries
Web Developmentreact, nextjs, typescript, css, tailwind
Testingtesting, jest, playwright, e2e
DevOpsdeploy, docker, kubernetes, ci-cd
Documentationdocs, readme, changelog, api-docs
Code Qualityreview, lint, refactor, best-practices
Designui, ux, design-system, accessibility
Productivityworkflow, automation, git

Tips for Effective Searches

  1. Use specific keywords: "react testing" is better than just "testing"
  2. Try alternative terms: If "deploy" doesn't work, try "deployment" or "ci-cd"
  3. Check popular sources: Many skills come from
    vercel-labs/agent-skills
    or
    ComposioHQ/awesome-claude-skills

When No Skills Are Found

If no relevant skills exist:

  1. Acknowledge that no existing skill was found
  2. Offer to help with the task directly using your general capabilities
  3. Suggest the user could create their own skill with
    npx skills init

Example:

I searched for skills related to "xyz" but didn't find any matches.
I can still help you with this task directly! Would you like me to proceed?

If this is something you do often, you could create your own skill:
npx skills init my-xyz-skill