Claude-skill-registry local-skills-setup
Set up and manage local skills for automatic matching and invocation
git clone https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data/local-skills-setup" ~/.claude/skills/majiayu000-claude-skill-registry-local-skills-setup && rm -rf "$T"
skills/data/local-skills-setup/SKILL.mdLocal Skills Setup
This skill provides a guided wizard for setting up and managing your local learned skills. Skills are reusable problem-solving patterns that Claude automatically applies when it detects matching triggers.
Why Local Skills?
Local skills allow you to capture hard-won insights and solutions that are specific to your codebase or workflow:
- Project-level skills (.omc/skills/) - Version-controlled with your repo
- User-level skills (~/.claude/skills/omc-learned/) - Portable across all your projects
When you solve a tricky bug or discover a non-obvious workaround, you can extract it as a skill. Claude will automatically detect and apply these skills in future conversations when it sees matching triggers.
Interactive Workflow
Step 1: Directory Check and Setup
First, check if skill directories exist and create them if needed:
# Check and create user-level skills directory USER_SKILLS_DIR="$HOME/.claude/skills/omc-learned" if [ -d "$USER_SKILLS_DIR" ]; then echo "User skills directory exists: $USER_SKILLS_DIR" else mkdir -p "$USER_SKILLS_DIR" echo "Created user skills directory: $USER_SKILLS_DIR" fi # Check and create project-level skills directory PROJECT_SKILLS_DIR=".omc/skills" if [ -d "$PROJECT_SKILLS_DIR" ]; then echo "Project skills directory exists: $PROJECT_SKILLS_DIR" else mkdir -p "$PROJECT_SKILLS_DIR" echo "Created project skills directory: $PROJECT_SKILLS_DIR" fi
Step 2: Skill Scan and Inventory
Scan both directories and show a comprehensive inventory:
# Scan user-level skills echo "=== USER-LEVEL SKILLS (~/.claude/skills/omc-learned/) ===" if [ -d "$HOME/.claude/skills/omc-learned" ]; then USER_COUNT=$(find "$HOME/.claude/skills/omc-learned" -name "*.md" 2>/dev/null | wc -l) echo "Total skills: $USER_COUNT" if [ $USER_COUNT -gt 0 ]; then echo "" echo "Skills found:" find "$HOME/.claude/skills/omc-learned" -name "*.md" -type f -exec sh -c ' FILE="$1" NAME=$(grep -m1 "^name:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/name: //") DESC=$(grep -m1 "^description:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/description: //") MODIFIED=$(stat -c "%y" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null || stat -f "%Sm" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null) echo " - $NAME" [ -n "$DESC" ] && echo " Description: $DESC" echo " Modified: $MODIFIED" echo "" ' sh {} \; fi else echo "Directory not found" fi echo "" echo "=== PROJECT-LEVEL SKILLS (.omc/skills/) ===" if [ -d ".omc/skills" ]; then PROJECT_COUNT=$(find ".omc/skills" -name "*.md" 2>/dev/null | wc -l) echo "Total skills: $PROJECT_COUNT" if [ $PROJECT_COUNT -gt 0 ]; then echo "" echo "Skills found:" find ".omc/skills" -name "*.md" -type f -exec sh -c ' FILE="$1" NAME=$(grep -m1 "^name:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/name: //") DESC=$(grep -m1 "^description:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/description: //") MODIFIED=$(stat -c "%y" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null || stat -f "%Sm" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null) echo " - $NAME" [ -n "$DESC" ] && echo " Description: $DESC" echo " Modified: $MODIFIED" echo "" ' sh {} \; fi else echo "Directory not found" fi # Summary TOTAL=$((USER_COUNT + PROJECT_COUNT)) echo "=== SUMMARY ===" echo "Total skills across all directories: $TOTAL"
Step 3: Quick Actions Menu
After scanning, use the AskUserQuestion tool to offer these options:
Question: "What would you like to do with your local skills?"
Options:
- Add new skill - Start the skill creation wizard
- List all skills with details - Show comprehensive skill inventory with triggers
- Scan conversation for patterns - Analyze current conversation for skill-worthy patterns
- Import skill - Import a skill from URL or paste content
- Done - Exit the wizard
Option 1: Add New Skill
If user chooses "Add new skill", invoke the learner skill:
Use the Skill tool to invoke: learner
This will guide them through the extraction process with quality validation.
Option 2: List All Skills with Details
Show detailed information including trigger keywords:
echo "=== DETAILED SKILL INVENTORY ===" echo "" # Function to show skill details show_skill_details() { FILE="$1" LOCATION="$2" echo "---" echo "Location: $LOCATION" echo "File: $(basename "$FILE")" # Extract frontmatter NAME=$(grep -m1 "^name:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/name: //") DESC=$(grep -m1 "^description:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/description: //") TRIGGERS=$(grep -m1 "^triggers:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/triggers: //") QUALITY=$(grep -m1 "^quality:" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | sed "s/quality: //") [ -n "$NAME" ] && echo "Name: $NAME" [ -n "$DESC" ] && echo "Description: $DESC" [ -n "$TRIGGERS" ] && echo "Triggers: $TRIGGERS" [ -n "$QUALITY" ] && echo "Quality: $QUALITY" # Last modified MODIFIED=$(stat -c "%y" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null | cut -d. -f1 || stat -f "%Sm" "$FILE" 2>/dev/null) echo "Last modified: $MODIFIED" echo "" } # Export function for subshell export -f show_skill_details # Show user-level skills if [ -d "$HOME/.claude/skills/omc-learned" ]; then echo "USER-LEVEL SKILLS:" find "$HOME/.claude/skills/omc-learned" -name "*.md" -type f -exec bash -c 'show_skill_details "$0" "user-level"' {} \; fi # Show project-level skills if [ -d ".omc/skills" ]; then echo "PROJECT-LEVEL SKILLS:" find ".omc/skills" -name "*.md" -type f -exec bash -c 'show_skill_details "$0" "project-level"' {} \; fi
Option 3: Scan Conversation for Patterns
Analyze the current conversation context to identify potential skill-worthy patterns. Look for:
- Recent debugging sessions with non-obvious solutions
- Tricky bugs that required investigation
- Codebase-specific workarounds discovered
- Error patterns that took time to resolve
Report findings and ask if user wants to extract any as skills.
Option 4: Import Skill
Ask user to provide either:
- URL: Download skill from a URL (e.g., GitHub gist)
- Paste content: Paste skill markdown content directly
Then ask for scope:
- User-level (~/.claude/skills/omc-learned/) - Available across all projects
- Project-level (.omc/skills/) - Only for this project
Validate the skill format and save to the chosen location.
Step 4: Skill Templates
Provide quick templates for common skill types. When user wants to create a skill, offer these starting points:
Error Solution Template
--- id: error-[unique-id] name: [Error Name] description: Solution for [specific error in specific context] source: conversation triggers: ["error message fragment", "file path", "symptom"] quality: high --- # [Error Name] ## The Insight What is the underlying cause of this error? What principle did you discover? ## Why This Matters What goes wrong if you don't know this? What symptom led here? ## Recognition Pattern How do you know when this applies? What are the signs? - Error message: "[exact error]" - File: [specific file path] - Context: [when does this occur] ## The Approach Step-by-step solution: 1. [Specific action with file/line reference] 2. [Specific action with file/line reference] 3. [Verification step] ## Example \`\`\`typescript // Before (broken) [problematic code] // After (fixed) [corrected code] \`\`\`
Workflow Skill Template
--- id: workflow-[unique-id] name: [Workflow Name] description: Process for [specific task in this codebase] source: conversation triggers: ["task description", "file pattern", "goal keyword"] quality: high --- # [Workflow Name] ## The Insight What makes this workflow different from the obvious approach? ## Why This Matters What fails if you don't follow this process? ## Recognition Pattern When should you use this workflow? - Task type: [specific task] - Files involved: [specific patterns] - Indicators: [how to recognize] ## The Approach 1. [Step with specific commands/files] 2. [Step with specific commands/files] 3. [Verification] ## Gotchas - [Common mistake and how to avoid it] - [Edge case and how to handle it]
Code Pattern Template
--- id: pattern-[unique-id] name: [Pattern Name] description: Pattern for [specific use case in this codebase] source: conversation triggers: ["code pattern", "file type", "problem domain"] quality: high --- # [Pattern Name] ## The Insight What's the key principle behind this pattern? ## Why This Matters What problems does this pattern solve in THIS codebase? ## Recognition Pattern When do you apply this pattern? - File types: [specific files] - Problem: [specific problem] - Context: [codebase-specific context] ## The Approach Decision-making heuristic, not just code: 1. [Principle-based step] 2. [Principle-based step] ## Example \`\`\`typescript [Illustrative example showing the principle] \`\`\` ## Anti-Pattern What NOT to do and why: \`\`\`typescript [Common mistake to avoid] \`\`\`
Integration Skill Template
--- id: integration-[unique-id] name: [Integration Name] description: How [system A] integrates with [system B] in this codebase source: conversation triggers: ["system name", "integration point", "config file"] quality: high --- # [Integration Name] ## The Insight What's non-obvious about how these systems connect? ## Why This Matters What breaks if you don't understand this integration? ## Recognition Pattern When are you working with this integration? - Files: [specific integration files] - Config: [specific config locations] - Symptoms: [what indicates integration issues] ## The Approach How to work with this integration correctly: 1. [Configuration step with file paths] 2. [Setup step with specific details] 3. [Verification step] ## Gotchas - [Integration-specific pitfall #1] - [Integration-specific pitfall #2]
Usage Modes
Direct Command Mode
When invoked with an argument, skip the interactive wizard:
- Show detailed skill inventory/oh-my-claudecode:local-skills-setup list
- Start skill creation (invoke learner)/oh-my-claudecode:local-skills-setup add
- Scan both skill directories/oh-my-claudecode:local-skills-setup scan
Interactive Mode
When invoked without arguments, run the full guided wizard (Steps 1-4).
Skill Quality Guidelines
Remind users that good skills are:
-
Non-Googleable - Can't easily find via search
- BAD: "How to read files in TypeScript" ❌
- GOOD: "This codebase uses custom path resolution requiring fileURLToPath" ✓
-
Context-Specific - References actual files/errors from THIS codebase
- BAD: "Use try/catch for error handling" ❌
- GOOD: "The aiohttp proxy in server.py:42 crashes on ClientDisconnectedError" ✓
-
Actionable with Precision - Tells exactly WHAT to do and WHERE
- BAD: "Handle edge cases" ❌
- GOOD: "When seeing 'Cannot find module' in dist/, check tsconfig.json moduleResolution" ✓
-
Hard-Won - Required significant debugging effort
- BAD: Generic programming patterns ❌
- GOOD: "Race condition in worker.ts - Promise.all at line 89 needs await" ✓
Benefits of Local Skills
When introducing the skill system, explain these benefits:
Automatic Application: Claude detects triggers and applies skills automatically - no need to remember or search for solutions.
Version Control: Project-level skills (.omc/skills/) are committed with your code, so the whole team benefits.
Evolving Knowledge: Skills improve over time as you discover better approaches and refine triggers.
Reduced Token Usage: Instead of re-solving the same problems, Claude applies known patterns efficiently.
Codebase Memory: Preserves institutional knowledge that would otherwise be lost in conversation history.
Related Skills
- Extract a skill from current conversation/oh-my-claudecode:learner
- Save quick notes (less formal than skills)/oh-my-claudecode:note
- Generate AGENTS.md codebase hierarchy/oh-my-claudecode:deepinit
Example Session
Show users what a typical session looks like:
> /oh-my-claudecode:local-skills-setup Checking skill directories... ✓ User skills directory exists: ~/.claude/skills/omc-learned/ ✓ Project skills directory exists: .omc/skills/ Scanning for skills... === USER-LEVEL SKILLS === Total skills: 3 - async-network-error-handling Description: Pattern for handling independent I/O failures in async network code Modified: 2026-01-20 14:32:15 - esm-path-resolution Description: Custom path resolution in ESM requiring fileURLToPath Modified: 2026-01-19 09:15:42 === PROJECT-LEVEL SKILLS === Total skills: 5 - session-timeout-fix Description: Fix for sessionId undefined after restart in session.ts Modified: 2026-01-22 16:45:23 - build-cache-invalidation Description: When to clear TypeScript build cache to fix phantom errors Modified: 2026-01-21 11:28:37 === SUMMARY === Total skills: 8 What would you like to do? 1. Add new skill 2. List all skills with details 3. Scan conversation for patterns 4. Import skill 5. Done
Tips for Users
- Run
periodically to review your skill library/oh-my-claudecode:local-skills-setup scan - After solving a tricky bug, immediately run learner to capture it
- Use project-level skills for codebase-specific knowledge
- Use user-level skills for general patterns that apply everywhere
- Review and refine triggers over time to improve matching accuracy