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softaworks/command-creator

softaworks

command-creator

This skill should be used when creating a Claude Code slash command. Use when users ask to "create a command", "make a slash command", "add a command", or want to document a workflow as a reusable command. Essential for creating optimized, agent-executable slash commands with proper structure and best practices.

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v1.1Saved Apr 20, 2026

Command Creator

This skill guides the creation of Claude Code slash commands - reusable workflows that can be invoked with /command-name in Claude Code conversations.

About Slash Commands

Slash commands are markdown files stored in .claude/commands/ (project-level) or ~/.claude/commands/ (global/user-level) that get expanded into prompts when invoked. They're ideal for:

  • Repetitive workflows (code review, PR submission, CI fixing)
  • Multi-step processes that need consistency
  • Agent delegation patterns
  • Project-specific automation

When to Use This Skill

Invoke this skill when users:

  • Ask to "create a command" or "make a slash command"
  • Want to automate a repetitive workflow
  • Need to document a consistent process for reuse
  • Say "I keep doing X, can we make a command for it?"
  • Want to create project-specific or global commands

Bundled Resources

This skill includes reference documentation for detailed guidance:

  • references/patterns.md - Command patterns (workflow automation, iterative fixing, agent delegation, simple execution)
  • references/examples.md - Real command examples with full source (submit-stack, ensure-ci, create-implementation-plan)
  • references/best-practices.md - Quality checklist, common pitfalls, writing guidelines, template structure

Load these references as needed when creating commands to understand patterns, see examples, or ensure quality.

Command Structure Overview

Every slash command is a markdown file with:

---
description: Brief description shown in /help (required)
argument-hint: <placeholder> (optional, if command takes arguments)
---

# Command Title

[Detailed instructions for the agent to execute autonomously]

Command Creation Workflow

Step 1: Determine Location

Auto-detect the appropriate location:

  1. Check git repository status: git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree 2>/dev/null
  2. Default location:
    • If in git repo → Project-level: .claude/commands/
    • If not in git repo → Global: ~/.claude/commands/
  3. Allow user override:
    • If user explicitly mentions "global" or "user-level" → Use ~/.claude/commands/
    • If user explicitly mentions "project" or "project-level" → Use .claude/commands/

Report the chosen location to the user before proceeding.

Step 2: Show Command Patterns

Help the user understand different command types. Load references/patterns.md to see available patterns:

  • Workflow Automation - Analyze → Act → Report (e.g., submit-stack)
  • Iterative Fixing - Run → Parse → Fix → Repeat (e.g., ensure-ci)
  • Agent Delegation - Context → Delegate → Iterate (e.g., create-implementation-plan)
  • Simple Execution - Run command with args (e.g., codex-review)

Ask the user: "Which pattern is closest to what you want to create?" This helps frame the conversation.

Step 3: Gather Command Information

Ask the user for key information:

A. Command Name and Purpose

Ask:

  • "What should the command be called?" (for filename)
  • "What does this command do?" (for description field)

Guidelines:

  • Command names MUST be kebab-case (hyphens, NOT underscores)
    • ✅ CORRECT: submit-stack, ensure-ci, create-from-plan
    • ❌ WRONG: submit_stack, ensure_ci, create_from_plan
  • File names match command names: my-command.md → invoked as /my-command
  • Description should be concise, action-oriented (appears in /help output)

B. Arguments

Ask:

  • "Does this command take any arguments?"
  • "Are arguments required or optional?"
  • "What should arguments represent?"

If command takes arguments:

  • Add argument-hint: <placeholder> to frontmatter
  • Use <angle-brackets> for required arguments
  • Use [square-brackets] for optional arguments

C. Workflow Steps

Ask:

  • "What are the specific steps this command should follow?"
  • "What order should they happen in?"
  • "What tools or commands should be used?"

Gather details about:

  • Initial analysis or checks to perform
  • Main actions to take
  • How to handle results
  • Success criteria
  • Error handling approach

D. Tool Restrictions and Guidance

Ask:

  • "Should this command use any specific agents or tools?"
  • "Are there any tools or operations it should avoid?"
  • "Should it read any specific files for context?"

Step 4: Generate Optimized Command

Create the command file with agent-optimized instructions. Load references/best-practices.md for:

  • Template structure
  • Best practices for agent execution
  • Writing style guidelines
  • Quality checklist

Key principles:

  • Use imperative/infinitive form (verb-first instructions)
  • Be explicit and specific
  • Include expected outcomes
  • Provide concrete examples
  • Define clear error handling

Step 5: Create the Command File

  1. Determine full file path:

    • Project: .claude/commands/[command-name].md
    • Global: ~/.claude/commands/[command-name].md
  2. Ensure directory exists:

    mkdir -p [directory-path]
    
  3. Write the command file using the Write tool

  4. Confirm with user:

    • Report the file location
    • Summarize what the command does
    • Explain how to use it: /command-name [arguments]

Step 6: Test and Iterate (Optional)

If the user wants to test:

  1. Suggest testing: You can test this command by running: /command-name [arguments]
  2. Be ready to iterate based on feedback
  3. Update the file with improvements as needed

Quick Tips

For detailed guidance, load the bundled references:

  • Load references/patterns.md when designing the command workflow
  • Load references/examples.md to see how existing commands are structured
  • Load references/best-practices.md before finalizing to ensure quality

Common patterns to remember:

  • Use Bash tool for pytest, pyright, ruff, prettier, make, gt commands
  • Use Task tool to invoke subagents for specialized tasks
  • Check for specific files first (e.g., .PLAN.md) before proceeding
  • Mark todos complete immediately, not in batches
  • Include explicit error handling instructions
  • Define clear success criteria

Summary

When creating a command:

  1. Detect location (project vs global)
  2. Show patterns to frame the conversation
  3. Gather information (name, purpose, arguments, steps, tools)
  4. Generate optimized command with agent-executable instructions
  5. Create file at appropriate location
  6. Confirm and iterate as needed

Focus on creating commands that agents can execute autonomously, with clear steps, explicit tool usage, and proper error handling.

Files5
5 files · 53.9 KB

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Overall Score

87/100

Grade

A

Excellent

Safety

90

Quality

88

Clarity

87

Completeness

84

Summary

Command Creator is a comprehensive skill for building optimized slash commands in Claude Code—reusable markdown-based workflows invoked with `/command-name`. It guides users through a structured 6-step process: detecting file location (project vs. global), selecting command patterns, gathering requirements, generating agent-executable instructions, creating the command file, and testing. The skill emphasizes agent autonomy, proper tool usage, and adherence to proven patterns (Workflow Automation, Iterative Fixing, Agent Delegation, Simple Execution).

Detected Capabilities

Interactive workflow guidance (6-step creation process)Automatic project vs. global location detection (git-aware)Command pattern recommendation (4 proven patterns)Kebab-case naming validation and enforcementArgument hint specification (required vs. optional)Agent-optimized instruction generationFile creation at project-level or user-level locationsReference material loading (patterns, examples, best-practices)Iterative refinement based on user feedbackMarkdown file creation with frontmatter

Trigger Keywords

Phrases that MCP clients use to match this skill to user intent.

create slash commandautomate workflowmake reusable commanddocument processrepetitive task automation

Risk Signals

INFO

File creation in user home directory (~/.claude/commands/)

SKILL.md: Step 1 (Location detection), Step 5 (File creation)
INFO

mkdir -p invocation to ensure directory exists

SKILL.md: Step 5 (Create the Command File)
INFO

Git repository detection (git rev-parse --is-inside-work-tree)

SKILL.md: Step 1 (Determine Location)
INFO

References to bundled markdown files for context loading

SKILL.md: Bundled Resources section, Step 2, Step 4
INFO

Guidance on creating commands that invoke external tools (Bash, Task, agents)

references/patterns.md, references/examples.md, references/best-practices.md

Use Cases

  • Automate repetitive multi-step workflows (e.g., PR submission, CI fixing)
  • Document consistent processes for team reuse
  • Create project-specific or global productivity commands
  • Convert manual procedures into autonomous agent-executable commands
  • Establish consistent patterns for complex tasks

Quality Notes

  • ✓ Exceptionally comprehensive: skill includes 3 detailed reference files (patterns, examples, best-practices) covering 90+ KB of supporting material
  • ✓ Clear 6-step workflow with well-defined decision points and user interactions
  • ✓ Excellent pattern guidance: 4 distinct patterns (Workflow Automation, Iterative Fixing, Agent Delegation, Simple Execution) with real examples
  • ✓ Strong emphasis on agent autonomy and autonomous execution principles
  • ✓ Extensive best-practices documentation including quality checklist, naming conventions, anti-patterns, common pitfalls
  • ✓ Real-world examples (submit-stack, ensure-ci, create-implementation-plan, codex-review) with full annotated source code
  • ✓ Explicit tool usage guidance (when to use Bash tool vs. Task tool vs. Edit tool)
  • ✓ Strong naming enforcement (kebab-case validation and clear examples of correct/incorrect)
  • ✓ Well-structured argument hint system with `<required>` and `[optional]` conventions
  • ✓ Excellent error handling guidance with specific patterns for different failure modes
  • ✓ Progress tracking recommendations (TodoWrite usage for iterative commands)
  • ✓ Clear distinction between project-level and global command scope
  • ✓ Bonus: includes trigger keywords and contextSignals guidance for discovery
  • - Could benefit from a checklist output at the end of Step 5 (confirmation template)
  • - Minor: some examples show bash code blocks but could be more explicit about which tool invokes them
Model: claude-haiku-4-5-20251001Analyzed: Apr 20, 2026

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Version History

v1.1

Content updated

2026-04-20

Latest
v1.0

No changelog

2026-04-12

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