MCP HubMCP Hub
스킬 목록으로 돌아가기

refactor-skill-structure

pjt222
업데이트됨 2 days ago
1 조회
17
2
17
GitHub에서 보기
메타ai

정보

이 스킬은 긴 글 또는 체계적으로 정리되지 않은 SKILL.md 파일을 500줄 제한에 맞게 재구성합니다. 예제를 별도의 파일로 추출하고 복잡한 절차를 분할하는 방식으로, 코드 블록이 문서를 지배하거나 업데이트로 인해 파일 크기 제한을 초과하는 경우에 사용됩니다. 점진적 정보 공개와 개선된 섹션 구성을 통해 가독성을 높이는 리팩토링을 수행합니다.

빠른 설치

Claude Code

추천
기본
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
플러그인 명령대체
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git 클론대체
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/refactor-skill-structure

Claude Code에서 이 명령을 복사하여 붙여넣어 스킬을 설치하세요

문서

Refactor Skill Structure

Refactor a SKILL.md that has exceeded the 500-line limit or developed structural problems. This skill extracts extended code examples to references/EXAMPLES.md, splits compound procedures into focused sub-procedures, adds cross-references for progressive disclosure, and verifies the skill remains complete and valid after restructuring.

When to Use

  • A skill exceeds the 500-line limit enforced by CI
  • A single procedure step contains multiple unrelated operations that should be separate steps
  • Code blocks longer than 15 lines dominate the SKILL.md and could be extracted
  • The skill has accumulated ad-hoc sections that break the standard six-section structure
  • After a content update pushed the skill over the line limit
  • A skill review flagged structural issues that go beyond content quality

Inputs

  • Required: Path to the SKILL.md file to refactor
  • Optional: Target line count (default: aim for 80% of the 500-line limit, i.e., ~400 lines)
  • Optional: Whether to create references/EXAMPLES.md (default: yes, if extractable content exists)
  • Optional: Whether to split into multiple skills (default: no, prefer extraction first)

Procedure

Step 1: Measure Current Line Count and Identify Bloat Sources

Read the skill and create a section-by-section line budget to identify where the bloat is.

# Total line count
wc -l < skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md

# Line count per section (approximate)
grep -n "^## \|^### " skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md

Classify bloat sources:

  • Extractable: Code blocks >15 lines, full configuration examples, multi-variant examples
  • Splittable: Compound procedure steps doing 2+ unrelated operations
  • Trimable: Redundant explanations, overly verbose context sentences
  • Structural: Ad-hoc sections not in the standard six-section structure

Got: A line budget showing which sections are over-sized and which bloat category applies to each. The largest sections are the primary refactoring targets.

If fail: If the skill is under 500 lines and no structural issues are apparent, this skill may not be needed. Verify the refactoring request is justified before proceeding.

Step 2: Extract Code Blocks to references/EXAMPLES.md

Move code blocks longer than 15 lines to a references/EXAMPLES.md file, leaving brief inline snippets (3-10 lines) in the main SKILL.md.

  1. Create the references directory:

    mkdir -p skills/<skill-name>/references/
    
  2. For each extractable code block:

    • Copy the full code block to references/EXAMPLES.md under a descriptive heading
    • Replace the code block in SKILL.md with a brief 3-5 line snippet
    • Add a cross-reference: See [EXAMPLES.md](references/EXAMPLES.md#heading) for the complete configuration.
  3. Structure references/EXAMPLES.md with clear headings:

    # Examples
    
    ## Example 1: Full Configuration
    
    Complete configuration file for [context]:
    
    \```yaml
    # ... full config here ...
    \```
    
    ## Example 2: Multi-Variant Setup
    
    ### Variant A: Development
    \```yaml
    # ... dev config ...
    \```
    
    ### Variant B: Production
    \```yaml
    # ... prod config ...
    \```
    

Got: All code blocks >15 lines are extracted. The main SKILL.md retains brief inline snippets for readability. Cross-references link to the extracted content. references/EXAMPLES.md is well-organized with descriptive headings.

If fail: If extracting code blocks does not reduce the line count sufficiently (still over 500), proceed to Step 3 for procedure splitting. If the skill has very few code blocks (e.g., a natural-language skill), focus on Steps 3 and 4 instead.

Step 3: Split Compound Procedures into Focused Steps

Identify procedure steps that perform multiple unrelated operations and split them.

Signs of a compound step:

  • The step title contains "and" (e.g., "Configure Database and Set Up Caching")
  • The step has multiple Expected/On failure blocks (or should have)
  • The step is longer than 30 lines
  • The step could be skipped or done in a different order from its sub-parts

For each compound step:

  1. Identify the distinct operations within the step
  2. Create a new ### Step N: for each operation
  3. Renumber subsequent steps
  4. Ensure each new step has its own Expected and On failure blocks
  5. Add transition context between new steps

Got: Each procedure step does one thing. No step exceeds 30 lines. Step count may increase but each step is independently verifiable.

If fail: If splitting a step creates steps that are too granular (e.g., 20+ total steps), consider grouping related micro-steps under a single step with numbered sub-steps instead. The sweet spot is 5-12 procedure steps.

Step 4: Add Cross-References from SKILL.md to Extracted Content

Ensure the main SKILL.md maintains readability and discoverability after extraction.

For each extraction:

  1. The inline snippet in SKILL.md should be self-sufficient for the common case
  2. The cross-reference should explain what additional content is available
  3. Use relative paths: [EXAMPLES.md](references/EXAMPLES.md#section-anchor)

Cross-reference patterns:

  • After a brief code snippet: See [EXAMPLES.md](references/EXAMPLES.md#full-configuration) for the complete configuration with all options.
  • For multi-variant examples: See [EXAMPLES.md](references/EXAMPLES.md#variants) for development, staging, and production variants.
  • For extended troubleshooting: See [EXAMPLES.md](references/EXAMPLES.md#troubleshooting) for additional error scenarios.

Got: Every extraction has a corresponding cross-reference. A reader can follow the main SKILL.md for the common case and drill into references for details.

If fail: If cross-references make the text flow awkward, consolidate multiple references into a single note at the end of the procedure step: For extended examples including [X], [Y], and [Z], see [EXAMPLES.md](references/EXAMPLES.md).

Step 5: Verify Line Count After Refactoring

Re-measure the SKILL.md line count after all changes.

# Check main SKILL.md
lines=$(wc -l < skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md)
[ "$lines" -le 500 ] && echo "SKILL.md: OK ($lines lines)" || echo "SKILL.md: STILL OVER ($lines lines)"

# Check references file if created
if [ -f skills/<skill-name>/references/EXAMPLES.md ]; then
  ref_lines=$(wc -l < skills/<skill-name>/references/EXAMPLES.md)
  echo "EXAMPLES.md: $ref_lines lines"
fi

# Total content
echo "Total content: $((lines + ${ref_lines:-0})) lines"

Got: SKILL.md is under 500 lines. Ideally under 400 lines to leave room for future growth. The references/EXAMPLES.md has no line limit.

If fail: If still over 500 lines after extraction and splitting, consider whether the skill should be decomposed into two separate skills. A skill covering too much ground is a sign of scope creep. Use create-skill to author the second skill and update Related Skills cross-references in both.

Step 6: Validate All Sections Still Present

After refactoring, verify the skill still has all required sections and the frontmatter is intact.

Run the review-skill-format checklist:

  1. YAML frontmatter parses correctly
  2. All six required sections present (When to Use, Inputs, Procedure, Validation, Common Pitfalls, Related Skills)
  3. Every procedure step has Expected and On failure blocks
  4. No orphaned cross-references (all links resolve)
# Quick section check
for section in "## When to Use" "## Inputs" "## Procedure" "## Pitfalls" "## Related Skills"; do
  grep -q "$section" skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md && echo "$section: OK" || echo "$section: MISSING"
done
grep -qE "## Validation( Checklist)?" skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md && echo "Validation: OK" || echo "Validation: MISSING"

Got: All sections present. No content was accidentally deleted during extraction. Cross-references in SKILL.md resolve to actual headings in EXAMPLES.md.

If fail: If a section was accidentally removed, restore it from git history: git diff skills/<skill-name>/SKILL.md to see what changed. If cross-references are broken, verify the heading anchors in EXAMPLES.md match the links in SKILL.md (GitHub-flavored markdown anchor rules: lowercase, hyphens for spaces, strip punctuation).

Validation

  • SKILL.md line count is 500 or fewer
  • All code blocks in SKILL.md are 15 lines or fewer
  • Extracted content is in references/EXAMPLES.md with descriptive headings
  • Every extraction has a cross-reference in the main SKILL.md
  • No compound procedure steps remain (each step does one thing)
  • All six required sections are present after refactoring
  • Every procedure step has Got: and If fail: blocks
  • YAML frontmatter is intact and parseable
  • Cross-reference links resolve to actual headings in EXAMPLES.md
  • review-skill-format validation passes on the refactored skill

Pitfalls

  • Extracting too aggressively: Moving all code to references makes the main SKILL.md unreadable. Keep 3-10 line snippets inline for the common case. Only extract blocks that are >15 lines or show multiple variants.
  • Broken anchor links: GitHub-flavored markdown anchors are case-sensitive in some renderers. Use lowercase headings in EXAMPLES.md and match exactly in cross-references. Test with grep -c "heading-text" references/EXAMPLES.md.
  • Losing Expected/On failure during splits: When splitting compound steps, ensure each new step gets its own Expected and On failure blocks. It is easy to leave one step without these blocks after a split.
  • Creating too many tiny steps: Splitting should produce 5-12 procedure steps. If you end up with 15+, you have split too aggressively. Merge related micro-steps back into logical groups.
  • Forgetting to update references/EXAMPLES.md headings: If you rename a section in EXAMPLES.md, all cross-reference anchors in SKILL.md must be updated. Grep for the old anchor name to catch all references.

Related Skills

  • review-skill-format — Run format validation after refactoring to confirm the skill is still compliant
  • update-skill-content — Content updates are often the trigger for structural refactoring when they push a skill over the line limit
  • create-skill — Reference the canonical structure when deciding how to organize extracted content
  • evolve-skill — When a skill needs to be split into two separate skills, use evolution to create the derivative

GitHub 저장소

pjt222/agent-almanac
경로: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/refactor-skill-structure
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

연관 스킬

content-collections

메타

이 스킬은 콘텐츠 콜렉션(Content Collections)을 위한 프로덕션 검증된 설정을 제공합니다. 콘텐츠 콜렉션은 Markdown/MDX 파일을 Zod 검증이 포함된 타입 안전한 데이터 콜렉션으로 변환해주는 TypeScript 최우선 도구입니다. 블로그, 문서 사이트 또는 콘텐츠 중심의 Vite + React 애플리케이션을 구축할 때 타입 안전성과 자동 콘텐츠 검증을 보장하기 위해 사용하세요. Vite 플러그인 구성과 MDX 컴파일부터 배포 최적화 및 스키마 검증에 이르기까지 모든 것을 다룹니다.

스킬 보기

polymarket

메타

이 스킬은 개발자들이 Polymarket 예측 시장 플랫폼을 활용한 애플리케이션을 구축할 수 있도록 지원하며, 거래 및 시장 데이터를 위한 API 통합 기능을 포함합니다. 또한 WebSocket을 통한 실시간 데이터 스트리밍을 제공하여 실시간 거래와 시장 활동을 모니터링할 수 있습니다. 이를 통해 거래 전략을 구현하거나 실시간 시장 업데이트를 처리하는 도구를 생성하는 데 활용할 수 있습니다.

스킬 보기

creating-opencode-plugins

메타

이 스킬은 개발자들이 명령어, 파일, LSP 작업 등 25개 이상의 이벤트 유형에 연결되는 OpenCode 플러그인을 만들 수 있도록 돕습니다. JavaScript/TypeScript 모듈을 위한 플러그인 구조, 이벤트 API 명세, 구현 패턴을 제공합니다. OpenCode AI 어시스턴트의 라이프사이클을 사용자 정의 이벤트 기반 로직으로 가로채거나, 모니터링하거나, 확장해야 할 때 사용하세요.

스킬 보기

sglang

메타

SGLang은 RadixAttention 프리픽스 캐싱을 활용하여 JSON, 정규식, 에이전트 워크플로우를 위한 고속 구조화 생성에 특화된 고성능 LLM 서빙 프레임워크입니다. 특히 반복되는 프리픽스가 있는 작업에서 상당히 빠른 추론 속도를 제공하여 복잡한 구조화 출력 및 다중 턴 대화에 이상적입니다. 제약 디코딩이 필요하거나 광범위한 프리픽스 공유가 있는 애플리케이션을 구축할 때는 vLLM과 같은 대안보다 SGLang을 선택하십시오.

스킬 보기