generate_command

📁 ratacat/claude-skills 📅 9 days ago
4
总安装量
3
周安装量
#51641
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/ratacat/claude-skills --skill generate_command

Agent 安装分布

opencode 3
claude-code 3
github-copilot 3
codex 3
kimi-cli 3
gemini-cli 3

Skill 文档

Arguments

[command purpose and requirements]

Create a Custom Claude Code Command

Create a new slash command in .claude/commands/ for the requested task.

Goal

#$ARGUMENTS

Key Capabilities to Leverage

File Operations:

  • Read, Edit, Write – modify files precisely
  • Glob, Grep – search codebase
  • MultiEdit – atomic multi-part changes

Development:

  • Bash – run commands (git, tests, linters)
  • Task – launch specialized agents for complex tasks
  • TodoWrite – track progress with todo lists

Web & APIs:

  • WebFetch, WebSearch – research documentation
  • GitHub (gh cli) – PRs, issues, reviews
  • Playwright – browser automation, screenshots

Integrations:

  • AppSignal – logs and monitoring
  • Context7 – framework docs
  • Stripe, Todoist, Featurebase (if relevant)

Best Practices

  1. Be specific and clear – detailed instructions yield better results
  2. Break down complex tasks – use step-by-step plans
  3. Use examples – reference existing code patterns
  4. Include success criteria – tests pass, linting clean, etc.
  5. Think first – use “think hard” or “plan” keywords for complex problems
  6. Iterate – guide the process step by step

Required: YAML Frontmatter

EVERY command MUST start with YAML frontmatter:

---
name: command-name
description: Brief description of what this command does (max 100 chars)
argument-hint: "[what arguments the command accepts]"
---

Fields:

  • name: Lowercase command identifier (used internally)
  • description: Clear, concise summary of command purpose
  • argument-hint: Shows user what arguments are expected (e.g., [file path], [PR number], [optional: format])

Structure Your Command

# [Command Name]

[Brief description of what this command does]

## Steps

1. [First step with specific details]
   - Include file paths, patterns, or constraints
   - Reference existing code if applicable

2. [Second step]
   - Use parallel tool calls when possible
   - Check/verify results

3. [Final steps]
   - Run tests
   - Lint code
   - Commit changes (if appropriate)

## Success Criteria

- [ ] Tests pass
- [ ] Code follows style guide
- [ ] Documentation updated (if needed)

Tips for Effective Commands

  • Use $ARGUMENTS placeholder for dynamic inputs
  • Reference CLAUDE.md patterns and conventions
  • Include verification steps – tests, linting, visual checks
  • Be explicit about constraints – don’t modify X, use pattern Y
  • Use XML tags for structured prompts: <task>, <requirements>, <constraints>

Example Pattern

Implement #$ARGUMENTS following these steps:

1. Research existing patterns
   - Search for similar code using Grep
   - Read relevant files to understand approach

2. Plan the implementation
   - Think through edge cases and requirements
   - Consider test cases needed

3. Implement
   - Follow existing code patterns (reference specific files)
   - Write tests first if doing TDD
   - Ensure code follows CLAUDE.md conventions

4. Verify
   - Run tests: `bin/rails test`
   - Run linter: `bundle exec standardrb`
   - Check changes with git diff

5. Commit (optional)
   - Stage changes
   - Write clear commit message

Creating the Command File

  1. Create the file at .claude/commands/[name].md (subdirectories like workflows/ supported)
  2. Start with YAML frontmatter (see section above)
  3. Structure the command using the template above
  4. Test the command by using it with appropriate arguments

Command File Template

---
name: command-name
description: What this command does
argument-hint: "[expected arguments]"
---

# Command Title

Brief introduction of what the command does and when to use it.

## Workflow

### Step 1: [First Major Step]

Details about what to do.

### Step 2: [Second Major Step]

Details about what to do.

## Success Criteria

- [ ] Expected outcome 1
- [ ] Expected outcome 2