claudini
Run one iteration of the autoresearch loop — study existing attack methods, design a better optimizer, implement it, benchmark it, and commit. Meant to be called repeatedly via /loop.
Run one iteration of the autoresearch loop — study existing attack methods, design a better optimizer, implement it, benchmark it, and commit. Meant to be called repeatedly via /loop.
Set up and run an autonomous experiment loop for any optimization target. Use when asked to start autoresearch or run experiments.
Autonomous experiment loop for optimization research. Use when the user wants to: - Optimize a metric through systematic experimentation (ML training loss, test speed, bundle size, build time, etc.) - Run an automated research loop: try an idea, measure it, keep improvements, revert regressions, repeat - Set up autoresearch for any codebase with a measurable optimization target Implements the autoresearch pattern with MAD-based confidence scoring, git branch isolation, and structured experiment logging. --- # Autoresearch
Autoresearch loop for governance files. Researches latest X discourse on each governance topic, proposes ONE atomic improvement per file, validates it, keeps or discards. Use when the user asks to improve, update, or evolve the governance framework using latest community insights.
Autonomous experiment loop — iteratively improve any measurable metric by modifying code, evaluating results, and keeping improvements. Use when the user says "autoresearch", "start experiments", "optimize this", "run the loop", or wants autonomous iteration on any measurable goal. Reads autoresearch.toml for config. Run `autoresearch init` first. --- ## Autoresearch — Autonomous Experiment Loop You are an autonomous research agent. Your mission: iteratively improve a measurable metric by modifying code, running experiments, and keeping what works. You will run hundreds of experiments. Most will fail. That's expected. The wins compound. --- ### Phase 1: Pre-Flight Before touching any code, validate the environment: ```bash autoresearch doctor ```
skill-sample/ ├─ SKILL.md ⭐ Required: skill entry doc (purpose / usage / examples / deps) ├─ manifest.sample.json ⭐ Recommended: machine-readable metadata (index / validation / autofill) ├─ LICENSE.sample ⭐ Recommended: license & scope (open source / restriction / commercial) ├─ scripts/ │ └─ example-run.py ✅ Runnable example script for quick verification ├─ assets/ │ ├─ example-formatting-guide.md 🧩 Output conventions: layout / structure / style │ └─ example-template.tex 🧩 Templates: quickly generate standardized output └─ references/ 🧩 Knowledge base: methods / guides / best practices ├─ example-ref-structure.md 🧩 Structure reference ├─ example-ref-analysis.md 🧩 Analysis reference └─ example-ref-visuals.md 🧩 Visual reference
More Agent Skills specs Anthropic docs: https://agentskills.io/home
├─ ⭐ Required: YAML Frontmatter (must be at top) │ ├─ ⭐ name : unique skill name, follow naming convention │ └─ ⭐ description : include trigger keywords for matching │ ├─ ✅ Optional: Frontmatter extension fields │ ├─ ✅ license : license identifier │ ├─ ✅ compatibility : runtime constraints when needed │ ├─ ✅ metadata : key-value fields (author/version/source_url...) │ └─ 🧩 allowed-tools : tool whitelist (experimental) │ └─ ✅ Recommended: Markdown body (progressive disclosure) ├─ ✅ Overview / Purpose ├─ ✅ When to use ├─ ✅ Step-by-step ├─ ✅ Inputs / Outputs ├─ ✅ Examples ├─ 🧩 Files & References ├─ 🧩 Edge cases ├─ 🧩 Troubleshooting └─ 🧩 Safety notes
Skill files are scattered across GitHub and communities, difficult to search, and hard to evaluate. SkillWink organizes open-source skills into a searchable, filterable library you can directly download and use.
We provide keyword search, version updates, multi-metric ranking (downloads / likes / comments / updates), and open SKILL.md standards. You can also discuss usage and improvements on skill detail pages.
Quick Start:
Import/download skills (.zip/.skill), then place locally:
~/.claude/skills/ (Claude Code)
~/.codex/skills/ (Codex CLI)
One SKILL.md can be reused across tools.
Everything you need to know: what skills are, how they work, how to find/import them, and how to contribute.
A skill is a reusable capability package, usually including SKILL.md (purpose/IO/how-to) and optional scripts/templates/examples.
Think of it as a plugin playbook + resource bundle for AI assistants/toolchains.
Skills use progressive disclosure: load brief metadata first, load full docs only when needed, then execute by guidance.
This keeps agents lightweight while preserving enough context for complex tasks.
Use these three together:
Note: file size for all methods should be within 10MB.
Typical paths (may vary by local setup):
One SKILL.md can usually be reused across tools.
Yes. Most skills are standardized docs + assets, so they can be reused where format is supported.
Example: retrieval + writing + automation scripts as one workflow.
Some skills come from public GitHub repositories and some are uploaded by SkillWink creators. Always review code before installing and own your security decisions.
Most common reasons:
We try to avoid that. Use ranking + comments to surface better skills: