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askill.sh

askill.sh

Every Agent Skill, One Registry

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The global registry for AI agent skills. Browse, discover and install SKILL.md packages for Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, OpenClaw, Cursor, and 40+ AI coding agents. Every skill is AI-scored across Safety, Clarity, Reusability, Completeness, and Actionability.
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What do you think? …

Alex
Maker
šŸ“Œ
Hey everyone! Maker here. Thanks for checking out askill. Here's what triggered this project: AI coding agents like Claude Code, Codex, and Openclaw are transforming how we write software. A growing ecosystem of "skills" — instruction files that teach agents specific workflows — is emerging across GitHub. But we noticed a critical gap: there's no trust layer. Think about it. A SKILL.md file literally tells your AI agent what to do and how to do it. It shapes your agent's behavior in your codebase. Would you install one from a stranger's repo without checking it first? Most people do — because there's no practical alternative. That's the problem askill solves. We built an AI-powered quality and safety layer for agent skills. Every skill on askill.sh is automatically reviewed by AI across 5 dimensions: • Safety — flags hardcoded secrets, dangerous commands, destructive operations • Clarity — is the skill well-documented and structured? • Reusability — does it work across projects, or is it repo-specific? • Completeness — does it actually cover what it claims? • Actionability — are the instructions concrete and executable? Scores, detailed breakdowns, and AI-generated review summaries are all visible before you install. Skills get re-evaluated automatically whenever their content changes on GitHub. Think of it as npm audit meets code review — but for agent skills, powered by AI. On top of that, askill is a proper package manager: • Dependency management — skills can depend on other skills • Semantic versioning — lock versions, manage updates safely • One command (askill add) installs across 40+ AI agents • Open ecosystem — we auto-index SKILL.md files from public GitHub repos We believe the agent skills ecosystem needs what every healthy open-source ecosystem has: a way to surface quality and filter out risk, at scale. Humans can't manually review thousands of skills. AI can — and that's exactly what askill does. Open source, free to use. We'd love to hear: what would make you trust (or distrust) an AI agent skill? And what skills would you want for your workflow?