Create a New Claude Code Skill
What You Are Doing
You are helping the user create a Claude Code Skill - a reusable markdown file (SKILL.md) that teaches Claude how to do something specific. Skills live in .claude/skills/<name>/ (project) or ~/.claude/skills/<name>/ (global) and are invoked either manually via /slash-command or automatically when Claude detects a matching task from the skill's description.
Why Skills Matter
- Consistency - Encode team conventions, workflows, and patterns so Claude follows them every time
- Reusability - Write instructions once, use across sessions and projects
- Composability - Skills can reference supporting files, preload into agents, and chain with other tools
- Discoverability - Good descriptions let Claude auto-invoke skills when relevant, no slash command needed
CRITICAL: Always Fetch Latest Docs
Skill structure, frontmatter fields, and best practices can change. Before creating any skill, you MUST use the claude-code-guide subagent type (via the Task tool) to look up the current documentation on Claude Code skills. Specifically research:
- Current YAML frontmatter fields and their valid values
- File structure requirements (SKILL.md, supporting files)
- Description best practices for triggering
- Any new features or fields that may have been added
Do this EVERY time, even if you think you know the answer. Docs are the source of truth.
Example Task tool call:
Task(subagent_type="claude-code-guide", prompt="Look up the current Claude Code documentation for skills. I need: all available YAML frontmatter fields, file structure requirements, description best practices, and any recent changes or new features.")
Context Awareness
This skill can be invoked at any point in a conversation. Always check the surrounding conversation context. The user might say things like:
- "/create-skill for that" - referring to something just discussed
- "/create-skill for the workflow we just talked about"
- "/create-skill" with no arguments but obvious context from the conversation
- "/create-skill auth-validator" with a name but you need to infer purpose from context
Look at what was just discussed, what files were read, what problems were solved, and what patterns emerged. Use that context to inform the skill you create.
If $ARGUMENTS is provided, use it. If not, infer from conversation context. If still unclear, ask.
Process
Step 1: Fetch Latest Documentation
Use the Task tool with subagent_type: "claude-code-guide" to fetch the latest skill documentation. Do NOT skip this step.
Step 2: Understand What the User Wants
Before creating anything, figure out:
- What should this skill do? - Check
$ARGUMENTSand conversation context - Who is it for? - Personal use or shared with a team?
- How should it trigger? - Manual only (
/command), auto-invoked by Claude, or both?
Step 3: Ask Clarifying Questions
Use AskUserQuestion to ask the user any questions you need answered before creating. Only ask questions where the answer isn't obvious from context. Common questions include:
- Scope: Should this be global (
~/.claude/skills/) or project-level (.claude/skills/)? - Invocation: Should Claude auto-invoke this, or manual
/commandonly? - Name: What should the skill be called? (suggest one based on context)
- Behavior: Any specific behavior, tools, or constraints?
Do NOT ask questions you can answer from context. If the user said "create a skill for reviewing PRs" you don't need to ask "what should the skill do?"
Step 4: Create the Skill
Based on the docs you fetched and the user's answers:
- Create the directory:
~/.claude/skills/<name>/or.claude/skills/<name>/ - Write
SKILL.mdwith proper YAML frontmatter and clear instructions - Add supporting files if the skill is complex (reference.md, examples.md, etc.)
- Validate the structure matches current doc requirements
Step 5: Confirm and Test
Tell the user:
- Where the skill was created
- How to invoke it (slash command name and/or auto-trigger description)
- Suggest they test it with a sample prompt
Quality Standards
- Keep
SKILL.mdunder 500 lines - use supporting files for detailed content - Description must include specific trigger keywords users would naturally say
- Include at least one concrete example in the skill content
- Directory name must match the
namefield in frontmatter - File must be exactly
SKILL.md(case-sensitive)