408 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
408 lines
11 KiB
Markdown
# Usage Guide: How to Actually Use These Skills
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> **Confused after installation?** This guide walks you through exactly what to do next, step by step.
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---
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## "I just installed the repository. Now what?"
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Great question! Here's what just happened and what to do next:
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### What You Just Did
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When you ran `npx antigravity-awesome-skills` or cloned the repository, you:
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✅ **Downloaded 1,254+ skill files** to your computer (default: `~/.gemini/antigravity/skills/`; or `~/.agent/skills/` if you used `--path`)
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✅ **Made them available** to your AI assistant
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❌ **Did NOT enable them all automatically** (they're just sitting there, waiting)
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Think of it like installing a toolbox. You have all the tools now, but you need to **pick which ones to use** for each job.
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---
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## Step 1: Understanding "Bundles" (This is NOT Another Install!)
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**Common confusion:** "Do I need to download each skill separately?"
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**Answer: NO!** Here's what bundles actually are:
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### What Bundles Are
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Bundles are **recommended lists** of skills grouped by role. They help you decide which skills to start using.
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**Analogy:**
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- You installed a toolbox with 1,254+ tools (✅ done)
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- Bundles are like **labeled organizer trays** saying: "If you're a carpenter, start with these 10 tools"
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- You don't install bundles—you **pick skills from them**
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### What Bundles Are NOT
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❌ Separate installations
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❌ Different download commands
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❌ Something you need to "activate"
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### Example: The "Web Wizard" Bundle
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When you see the [Web Wizard bundle](bundles.md#-the-web-wizard-pack), it lists:
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- `frontend-design`
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- `react-best-practices`
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- `tailwind-patterns`
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- etc.
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These are **recommendations** for which skills a web developer should try first. They're already installed—you just need to **use them in your prompts**.
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---
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## Step 2: How to Actually Execute/Use a Skill
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This is the part that should have been explained better! Here's how to use skills:
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### The Simple Answer
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**Just mention the skill name in your conversation with your AI assistant.**
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### Different Tools, Different Syntax
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The exact syntax varies by tool, but it's always simple:
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#### Claude Code (CLI)
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```bash
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# In your terminal/chat with Claude Code:
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>> Use @brainstorming to help me design a todo app
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```
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#### Cursor (IDE)
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```bash
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# In the Cursor chat panel:
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@brainstorming help me design a todo app
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```
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#### Gemini CLI
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```bash
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# In your conversation with Gemini:
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Use the brainstorming skill to help me plan my app
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```
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#### Codex CLI
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```bash
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# In your conversation with Codex:
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Apply @brainstorming to design a new feature
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```
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#### Antigravity IDE
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```bash
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# In agent mode:
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Use @brainstorming to plan this feature
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```
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> **Pro Tip:** Most modern tools use the `@skill-name` syntax. When in doubt, try that first!
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---
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## Step 3: What Should My Prompts Look Like?
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Here are **real-world examples** of good prompts:
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### Example 1: Starting a New Project
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**Bad Prompt:**
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> "Help me build a todo app"
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**Good Prompt:**
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> "Use @brainstorming to help me design a todo app with user authentication and cloud sync"
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**Why it's better:** You're explicitly invoking the skill and providing context.
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---
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### Example 2: Reviewing Code
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**Bad Prompt:**
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> "Check my code"
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**Good Prompt:**
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> "Use @lint-and-validate to check `src/components/Button.tsx` for issues"
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**Why it's better:** Specific skill + specific file = precise results.
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---
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### Example 3: Security Audit
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**Bad Prompt:**
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> "Make my API secure"
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**Good Prompt:**
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> "Use @api-security-best-practices to review my REST endpoints in `routes/api/users.js`"
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**Why it's better:** The AI knows exactly which skill's standards to apply.
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---
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### Example 4: Combining Multiple Skills
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**Good Prompt:**
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> "Use @brainstorming to design a payment flow, then apply @stripe-integration to implement it"
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**Why it's good:** You can chain skills together in a single prompt!
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---
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## Step 4: Your First Skill (Hands-On Tutorial)
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Let's actually use a skill right now. Follow these steps:
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### Scenario: You want to plan a new feature
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1. **Pick a skill:** Let's use `brainstorming` (from the "Essentials" bundle)
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2. **Open your AI assistant** (Claude Code, Cursor, etc.)
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3. **Type this exact prompt:**
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```
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Use @brainstorming to help me design a user profile page for my app
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```
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4. **Press Enter**
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5. **What happens next:**
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- The AI loads the brainstorming skill
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- It will start asking you structured questions (one at a time)
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- It will guide you through understanding, requirements, and design
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- You answer each question, and it builds a complete spec
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6. **Result:** You'll end up with a detailed design document—without writing a single line of code yet!
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---
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## Step 5: Picking Your First Skills (Practical Advice)
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Don't try to use all 1,254+ skills at once. Here's a sensible approach:
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### Start with "The Essentials" (5 skills, everyone needs these)
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1. **`@brainstorming`** - Plan before you build
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2. **`@lint-and-validate`** - Keep code clean
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3. **`@git-pushing`** - Save work safely
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4. **`@systematic-debugging`** - Fix bugs faster
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5. **`@concise-planning`** - Organize tasks
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**How to use them:**
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- Before writing new code → `@brainstorming`
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- After writing code → `@lint-and-validate`
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- Before committing → `@git-pushing`
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- When stuck → `@systematic-debugging`
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### Then Add Role-Specific Skills (5-10 more)
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Find your role in [bundles.md](bundles.md) and pick 5-10 skills from that bundle.
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**Example for Web Developer:**
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- `@frontend-design`
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- `@react-best-practices`
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- `@tailwind-patterns`
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- `@seo-audit`
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**Example for Security Engineer:**
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- `@api-security-best-practices`
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- `@vulnerability-scanner`
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- `@ethical-hacking-methodology`
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### Finally, Add On-Demand Skills (as needed)
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Keep the [CATALOG.md](../../CATALOG.md) open as reference. When you need something specific:
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> "I need to integrate Stripe payments"
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> → Search catalog → Find `@stripe-integration` → Use it!
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---
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## Complete Example: Building a Feature End-to-End
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Let's walk through a realistic scenario:
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### Task: "Add a blog to my Next.js website"
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#### Step 1: Plan (use @brainstorming)
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```
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You: Use @brainstorming to design a blog system for my Next.js site
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AI: [Asks structured questions about requirements]
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You: [Answer questions]
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AI: [Produces detailed design spec]
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```
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#### Step 2: Implement (use @nextjs-best-practices)
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```
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You: Use @nextjs-best-practices to scaffold the blog with App Router
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AI: [Creates file structure, sets up routes, adds components]
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```
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#### Step 3: Style (use @tailwind-patterns)
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```
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You: Use @tailwind-patterns to make the blog posts look modern
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AI: [Applies Tailwind styling with responsive design]
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```
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#### Step 4: SEO (use @seo-audit)
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```
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You: Use @seo-audit to optimize the blog for search engines
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AI: [Adds meta tags, sitemaps, structured data]
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```
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#### Step 5: Test & Deploy
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```
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You: Use @test-driven-development to add tests, then @vercel-deployment to deploy
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AI: [Creates tests, sets up CI/CD, deploys to Vercel]
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```
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**Result:** Professional blog built with best practices, without manually researching each step!
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---
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## Common Questions
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### "Which tool should I use? Claude Code, Cursor, Gemini?"
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**Any of them!** Skills work universally. Pick the tool you already use or prefer:
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- **Claude Code** - Best for terminal/CLI workflows
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- **Cursor** - Best for IDE integration
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- **Gemini CLI** - Best for Google ecosystem
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- **Codex CLI** - Best for OpenAI ecosystem
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### "Can I see all available skills?"
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Yes! Three ways:
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1. Browse [CATALOG.md](../../CATALOG.md) (searchable list)
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2. Run `ls ~/.agent/skills/` (if installed there)
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3. Ask your AI: "What skills do you have for [topic]?"
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### "Do I need to restart my IDE after installing?"
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Usually no, but if your AI doesn't recognize a skill:
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1. Try restarting your IDE/CLI
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2. Check the installation path matches your tool
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3. Try the explicit path: `npx antigravity-awesome-skills --claude` (or `--cursor`, `--gemini`, etc.)
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### "Can I load all skills into the model at once?"
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No. Even though you have 1,254+ skills installed locally, you should **not** concatenate every `SKILL.md` into a single system prompt or context block.
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The intended pattern is:
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- use `data/skills_index.json` (the manifest) to discover which skills exist; and
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- only load the `SKILL.md` files for the specific `@skill-id` values you actually use in a conversation.
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If you are building your own host/agent (e.g. Jetski/Cortex + Gemini), see:
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- [`docs/integrations/jetski-cortex.md`](../integrations/jetski-cortex.md)
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### "Can I create my own skills?"
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Yes! Use the `@skill-creator` skill:
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```
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Use @skill-creator to help me build a custom skill for [your task]
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```
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### "What if a skill doesn't work as expected?"
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1. Check the skill's SKILL.md file directly: `~/.agent/skills/[skill-name]/SKILL.md`
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2. Read the description to ensure you're using it correctly
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3. [Open an issue](https://github.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills/issues) with details
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---
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## Quick Reference Card
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**Save this for quick lookup:**
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| Task | Skill to Use | Example Prompt |
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| ---------------- | ------------------------------ | --------------------------------------------------- |
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| Plan new feature | `@brainstorming` | `Use @brainstorming to design a login system` |
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| Review code | `@lint-and-validate` | `Use @lint-and-validate on src/app.js` |
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| Debug issue | `@systematic-debugging` | `Use @systematic-debugging to fix login error` |
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| Security audit | `@api-security-best-practices` | `Use @api-security-best-practices on my API routes` |
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| SEO check | `@seo-audit` | `Use @seo-audit on my landing page` |
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| React component | `@react-patterns` | `Use @react-patterns to build a form component` |
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| Deploy app | `@vercel-deployment` | `Use @vercel-deployment to ship this to production` |
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---
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## Next Steps
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Now that you understand how to use skills:
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1. ✅ **Try one skill right now** - Start with `@brainstorming` on any idea you have
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2. 📚 **Pick 3-5 skills** from your role's bundle in [bundles.md](bundles.md)
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3. 🔖 **Bookmark** [CATALOG.md](../../CATALOG.md) for when you need something specific
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4. 🎯 **Try a workflow** from [workflows.md](workflows.md) for a complete end-to-end process
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---
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## Pro Tips for Maximum Effectiveness
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### Tip 1: Start Every Feature with @brainstorming
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> Before writing code, use `@brainstorming` to plan. You'll save hours of refactoring.
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### Tip 2: Chain Skills in Order
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> Don't try to do everything at once. Use skills sequentially: Plan → Build → Test → Deploy
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### Tip 3: Be Specific in Prompts
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> Bad: "Use @react-patterns"
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> Good: "Use @react-patterns to build a modal component with animations"
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### Tip 4: Reference File Paths
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> Help the AI focus: "Use @security-auditor on routes/api/auth.js"
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### Tip 5: Combine Skills for Complex Tasks
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> "Use @brainstorming to design, then @test-driven-development to implement with tests"
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---
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## Still Confused?
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If something still doesn't make sense:
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1. Check the [FAQ](faq.md)
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2. See [Real-World Examples](../contributors/examples.md)
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3. [Open a Discussion](https://github.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills/discussions)
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4. [File an Issue](https://github.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills/issues) to help us improve this guide!
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Remember: You're not alone! The whole point of this project is to make AI assistants easier to use. If this guide didn't help, let us know so we can fix it. 🙌
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