Claude Code Plugins

Community-maintained marketplace

Feedback

Reference terminal documentation for TTY/PTY, streams, signals, and cross-platform patterns

Install Skill

1Download skill
2Enable skills in Claude

Open claude.ai/settings/capabilities and find the "Skills" section

3Upload to Claude

Click "Upload skill" and select the downloaded ZIP file

Note: Please verify skill by going through its instructions before using it.

SKILL.md

name terminal-docs
description Reference terminal documentation for TTY/PTY, streams, signals, and cross-platform patterns

Terminal Documentation Reference Skill

Overview

This skill provides access to comprehensive terminal and shell systems documentation. Use this skill to look up exact configurations, code patterns, and best practices for terminal-related development.

Documentation Location

All documentation is stored in: /home/mwguerra/projects/mwguerra/claude-code-plugins/terminal-specialist/skills/terminal-docs/references/

Directory Structure

references/
├── 01-fundamentals.md      # TTY/PTY concepts, terminal stack, device files
├── 02-streams.md           # stdin, stdout, stderr, buffering behavior
├── 03-exit-codes.md        # Exit status, POSIX codes, signal exits
├── 04-shells.md            # Shell types, startup files, options
├── 05-dimensions.md        # Terminal size, SIGWINCH, resize handling
├── 06-modes.md             # Canonical/raw mode, termios flags
├── 07-job-control.md       # Sessions, process groups, background jobs
├── 08-environment.md       # TERM, PATH, locale, prompt variables
├── 09-signals.md           # Signal handling, keyboard signals
├── 10-escape-sequences.md  # ANSI codes, colors, cursor control
├── 11-redirection.md       # Pipes, file descriptors, here docs
├── 12-windows.md           # Windows console, ConPTY, PowerShell
├── 13-cross-platform.md    # Portable patterns, platform differences
└── 14-advanced.md          # tmux, screen, recording, graphics

Usage

When to Use This Skill

  1. Before implementing terminal-related functionality
  2. When debugging I/O or stream issues
  3. To verify correct escape sequence syntax
  4. To understand terminal mode behavior
  5. For signal handling patterns
  6. For cross-platform compatibility guidance

Search Workflow

  1. Identify Topic: Determine what documentation is needed
  2. Navigate to File: Go to relevant documentation file
  3. Read Documentation: Extract exact patterns
  4. Apply Knowledge: Use in implementation

Common Lookups

Topic File
Terminal architecture 01-fundamentals.md
Stream buffering 02-streams.md
Exit codes 03-exit-codes.md
Shell configuration 04-shells.md
Terminal size 05-dimensions.md
Raw mode 06-modes.md
Job control 07-job-control.md
Environment variables 08-environment.md
Signal handling 09-signals.md
ANSI escape codes 10-escape-sequences.md
Pipes and redirection 11-redirection.md
Windows console 12-windows.md
Cross-platform 13-cross-platform.md
Multiplexers 14-advanced.md

Documentation Reading Pattern

When reading documentation:

  1. Find the right file: Match topic to documentation file
  2. Read the overview: Understand the concept
  3. Extract code examples: Copy exact patterns
  4. Note platform specifics: Consider Unix/Windows differences
  5. Check best practices: Apply safety and portability tips

Example Usage

Looking up ANSI Color Codes

  1. Navigate to 10-escape-sequences.md
  2. Find Colors section
  3. Extract:
    • 4-bit color codes (30-37, 40-47)
    • 256-color format
    • True color format
    • tput commands

Looking up Signal Handling

  1. Navigate to 09-signals.md
  2. Find relevant section (Bash, C, Python)
  3. Extract:
    • Signal handler setup
    • Signal-safe patterns
    • Cleanup handlers

Looking up Cross-Platform Input

  1. Navigate to 13-cross-platform.md
  2. Find Key Input section
  3. Extract:
    • Unix termios pattern
    • Windows msvcrt pattern
    • Platform detection code

Output

After reading documentation, provide:

  1. Exact code pattern from docs
  2. Platform considerations
  3. Best practices noted
  4. Safety/security notes
  5. Alternative approaches if applicable