Skillshub presentation-creator

Create data-driven presentation slides using React, Vite, and Recharts with Sentry branding. Use when asked to "create a presentation", "build slides", "make a deck", "create a data presentation", "build a Sentry presentation". Scaffolds a complete slide-based app with charts, animations, and single-file HTML output.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/ComeOnOliver/skillshub
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/ComeOnOliver/skillshub "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/getsentry/skills/presentation-creator" ~/.claude/skills/comeonoliver-skillshub-presentation-creator && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: skills/getsentry/skills/presentation-creator/SKILL.md
source content

Sentry Presentation Builder

Create interactive, data-driven presentation slides using React + Vite + Recharts, styled with the Sentry design system and built as a single distributable HTML file.

Step 1: Gather Requirements

Ask the user:

  1. What is the presentation topic?
  2. How many slides (typically 5-8)?
  3. What data/charts are needed? (time series, comparisons, diagrams, zone charts)
  4. What is the narrative arc? (problem → solution, before → after, technical deep-dive)

Data Assessment (CRITICAL)

Before designing any slides, assess whether the source content contains real quantitative data (numbers, percentages, measurements, time series, costs, metrics). Only create Recharts visualizations for slides where real data exists. Do NOT fabricate, estimate, or invent data to fill charts.

  • Has real data → use a Recharts chart (bar, area, line, etc.)
  • Has no data → use text-based layouts: cards, tables, bullet columns, diagrams, or quote blocks. Do NOT create a chart with made-up numbers.

If the source content is purely qualitative (narrative, opinions, strategy, process descriptions), the presentation should use zero charts. Recharts and

Charts.jsx
should only be included in the project if at least one slide has real data to visualize.

Step 2: Scaffold the Project

Create the project structure:

<project-name>/
├── index.html
├── package.json
├── vite.config.js
└── src/
    ├── main.jsx
    ├── App.jsx
    ├── App.css
    └── Charts.jsx

index.html

<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <meta charset="UTF-8" />
    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0" />
    <link rel="preconnect" href="https://fonts.googleapis.com" />
    <link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Rubik:wght@300;400;500;600;700&display=swap" rel="stylesheet" />
    <link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css2?family=Material+Symbols+Outlined:opsz,wght,FILL,GRAD@20..48,100..700,0..1,-50..200&display=swap" rel="stylesheet" />
    <title>TITLE</title>
  </head>
  <body>
    <div id="root"></div>
    <script type="module" src="/src/main.jsx"></script>
  </body>
</html>

package.json

{
  "name": "PROJECT_NAME",
  "private": true,
  "type": "module",
  "scripts": { "dev": "vite", "build": "vite build", "preview": "vite preview" },
  "dependencies": { "react": "^18.3.1", "react-dom": "^18.3.1", "recharts": "^2.15.3" },
  "devDependencies": { "@vitejs/plugin-react": "^4.3.4", "vite": "^6.0.0", "vite-plugin-singlefile": "^2.3.0" }
}

vite.config.js

import { defineConfig } from 'vite'
import react from '@vitejs/plugin-react'
import { viteSingleFile } from 'vite-plugin-singlefile'

export default defineConfig({ plugins: [react(), viteSingleFile()] })

main.jsx

import React from 'react'
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom/client'
import App from './App'
import './App.css'

ReactDOM.createRoot(document.getElementById('root')).render(<App />)

Step 3: Build the Slide System

Read

${CLAUDE_SKILL_ROOT}/references/design-system.md
for the complete Sentry color palette, typography, CSS variables, layout utilities, and animation system.

App.jsx Structure

Define slides as an array of functions returning JSX:

const SLIDES = [
  () => ( /* Slide 0: Title */ ),
  () => ( /* Slide 1: Context */ ),
  // ...
];

Each slide function returns a

<div className="slide-content">
with:

  1. An
    <h2>
    heading
  2. Optional subtitle paragraph
  3. Main content (charts, cards, diagrams, tables)
  4. Animation classes:
    .anim
    ,
    .d1
    ,
    .d2
    ,
    .d3
    for staggered fade-in

Do NOT add category tag pills/badges above headings (e.g., "BACKGROUND", "EXPERIMENTS"). They look generic and add no value. Let the heading speak for itself.

Navigation

Implement keyboard navigation (ArrowRight/Space = next, ArrowLeft = prev) and a bottom nav overlay with prev/next buttons, dot indicators, and slide number. The nav has no border or background — it floats transparently. A small low-contrast Sentry glyph watermark sits fixed in the top-left corner of every slide.

function App() {
  const [cur, setCur] = useState(0);
  const go = useCallback((d) => setCur(c => Math.max(0, Math.min(SLIDES.length - 1, c + d))), []);

  useEffect(() => {
    const h = (e) => {
      if (e.target.tagName === 'INPUT') return;
      if (e.key === 'ArrowRight' || e.key === ' ') { e.preventDefault(); go(1); }
      if (e.key === 'ArrowLeft') { e.preventDefault(); go(-1); }
    };
    window.addEventListener('keydown', h);
    return () => window.removeEventListener('keydown', h);
  }, [go]);

  return (
    <>
      {cur > 0 && <div className="glyph-watermark"><SentryGlyph size={50} /><span className="watermark-title">TITLE</span></div>}
      <div className="progress" style={{ width: `${((cur + 1) / SLIDES.length) * 100}%` }} />
      {SLIDES.map((S, i) => (
        <div key={i} className={`slide ${i === cur ? 'active' : ''}`}>
          <div className={`slide-content${i === cur ? ' anim' : ''}`}>
            <S />
          </div>
        </div>
      ))}
      <Nav cur={cur} total={SLIDES.length} go={go} setCur={setCur} />
    </>
  );
}

Step 4: Create Charts (Only When Data Exists)

IMPORTANT: Only create charts for slides backed by real, concrete data from the source content. If a slide's content is qualitative (strategies, learnings, process descriptions, opinions), use text-based layouts instead (cards, tables, bullet lists, columns). Never invent numbers, fabricate percentages, or generate synthetic data to populate a chart. If you are unsure whether data is real or inferred, do NOT create a chart.

If NO slides require charts, skip this step entirely — do not create

Charts.jsx
or import Recharts.

When real data IS available, read

${CLAUDE_SKILL_ROOT}/references/chart-patterns.md
for Recharts component patterns including axis configuration, color constants, chart types, and data generation techniques.

Put all chart components in

Charts.jsx
. Key patterns:

  • Use
    ResponsiveContainer
    with explicit height
  • Wrap in
    .chart-wrap
    div with max-width 920px
  • Use
    useMemo
    for data generation
  • Color rule: Use the Tableau-inspired categorical palette (
    CAT[]
    ) for distinguishing data series and groups. Only use semantic colors (
    SEM_GREEN
    ,
    SEM_RED
    ,
    SEM_AMBER
    ) when the color itself carries meaning (good/bad, success/failure, warning).
  • Common charts:
    ComposedChart
    with stacked
    Area
    /
    Line
    ,
    BarChart
    , custom SVG diagrams
  • Every data point in a chart must come from the source content. Do not interpolate, extrapolate, or round numbers to make charts look better.

Step 5: Style with Sentry Design System

Apply the complete CSS from the design system reference. Key elements:

  • Font: Rubik from Google Fonts
  • Colors: CSS variables for UI chrome (
    --purple
    ,
    --dark
    ,
    --muted
    ). Semantic CSS variables (
    --semantic-green
    ,
    --semantic-red
    ,
    --semantic-amber
    ) only where color conveys meaning. Categorical palette (
    CAT[]
    ) for all other data visualization.
  • Slides: Absolute positioned, opacity transitions
  • Animations:
    fadeUp
    keyframe with staggered delays
  • Layout:
    .cols
    flex rows,
    .cards
    grid,
    .chart-wrap
    containers
  • Tags:
    .tag-purple
    ,
    .tag-red
    ,
    .tag-green
    ,
    .tag-amber
    for slide labels
  • Logo: Read the official SVG from
    ${CLAUDE_SKILL_ROOT}/references/sentry-logo.svg
    (full wordmark) or
    sentry-glyph.svg
    (glyph only). Do NOT hardcode an approximation — always use the exact SVG paths from these files.

Step 6: Common Slide Patterns

Title Slide

Logo (from

${CLAUDE_SKILL_ROOT}/references/sentry-logo.svg
or
sentry-glyph.svg
) + h1 + subtitle + author/date info.

Problem/Context Slide

Tag + heading + 2-column card grid with icon headers.

Data Comparison Slide

Tag + heading + side-by-side charts or before/after comparison table.

Technical Deep-Dive Slide

Tag + heading + full-width chart + annotation bullets below.

Summary/Decision Slide

Tag + heading + 3-column layout with category headers and bullet lists.

Step 7: Iterate and Refine

After initial scaffolding:

  1. Run
    npm install && npm run dev
    to start the dev server
  2. Iterate on chart data models and visual design
  3. Adjust animations, colors, and layout spacing
  4. Build final output:
    npm run build
    produces a single HTML file in
    dist/

Output Expectations

A working React + Vite project that:

  • Renders as a keyboard-navigable slide deck
  • Uses Sentry branding (colors, fonts, icons)
  • Contains Recharts visualizations only for slides with real quantitative data from the source content — no fabricated data
  • Omits
    Charts.jsx
    and the Recharts dependency entirely if no slides have real data
  • Builds to a single distributable HTML file
  • Has smooth fade-in animations on slide transitions