| name | Getting Started with Skills |
| description | Skills wiki intro - mandatory workflows, search tool, brainstorming triggers |
| when_to_use | when starting any conversation |
| version | 1.0.0 |
Getting Started with Skills
Critical Rules
Use Read tool before announcing skill usage. The session-start hook does NOT read skills for you. Announcing without calling Read = lying.
Follow mandatory workflows. Brainstorming before coding. Check for skills before ANY task.
Create TodoWrite todos for checklists. Mental tracking = steps get skipped. Every time.
Mandatory Workflow: Before ANY Task
1. Check skills list at session start, or run find-skills [PATTERN] to filter.
2. If relevant skill exists, YOU MUST use it:
- Use Read tool with full path:
${SUPERPOWERS_SKILLS_ROOT}/skills/category/skill-name/SKILL.md - Read ENTIRE file, not just frontmatter
- Announce: "I've read [Skill Name] skill and I'm using it to [purpose]"
- Follow it exactly
Don't rationalize:
- "I remember this skill" - Skills evolve. Read the current version.
- "Session-start showed it to me" - That was using-skills/SKILL.md only. Read the actual skill.
- "This doesn't count as a task" - It counts. Find and read skills.
Why: Skills document proven techniques that save time and prevent mistakes. Not using available skills means repeating solved problems and making known errors.
If a skill for your task exists, you must use it or you will fail at your task.
Skills with Checklists
If a skill has a checklist, YOU MUST create TodoWrite todos for EACH item.
Don't:
- Work through checklist mentally
- Skip creating todos "to save time"
- Batch multiple items into one todo
- Mark complete without doing them
Why: Checklists without TodoWrite tracking = steps get skipped. Every time. The overhead of TodoWrite is tiny compared to the cost of missing steps.
Examples: skills/testing/test-driven-development/SKILL.md, skills/debugging/systematic-debugging/SKILL.md, skills/meta/writing-skills/SKILL.md
Announcing Skill Usage
After you've read a skill with Read tool, announce you're using it:
"I've read the [Skill Name] skill and I'm using it to [what you're doing]."
Examples:
- "I've read the Brainstorming skill and I'm using it to refine your idea into a design."
- "I've read the Test-Driven Development skill and I'm using it to implement this feature."
- "I've read the Systematic Debugging skill and I'm using it to find the root cause."
Why: Transparency helps your human partner understand your process and catch errors early. It also confirms you actually read the skill.
How to Read a Skill
Every skill has the same structure:
- Frontmatter -
when_to_usetells you if this skill matches your situation - Overview - Core principle in 1-2 sentences
- Quick Reference - Scan for your specific pattern
- Implementation - Full details and examples
- Supporting files - Load only when implementing
Many skills contain rigid rules (TDD, debugging, verification). Follow them exactly. Don't adapt away the discipline.
Some skills are flexible patterns (architecture, naming). Adapt core principles to your context.
The skill itself tells you which type it is.
Instructions ≠ Permission to Skip Workflows
Your human partner's specific instructions describe WHAT to do, not HOW.
"Add X", "Fix Y" = the goal, NOT permission to skip brainstorming, TDD, or RED-GREEN-REFACTOR.
Red flags: "Instruction was specific" • "Seems simple" • "Workflow is overkill"
Why: Specific instructions mean clear requirements, which is when workflows matter MOST. Skipping process on "simple" tasks is how simple tasks become complex problems.
Summary
Starting any task:
- Run find-skills to check for relevant skills
- If relevant skill exists → Use Read tool with full path (includes /SKILL.md)
- Announce you're using it
- Follow what it says
Skill has checklist? TodoWrite for every item.
Finding a relevant skill = mandatory to read and use it. Not optional.