/install glsl-encyclopedia
GLSL Encyclopedia
Overview
Use a docs-first workflow for GLSL work. Prefer the official GLSL language/specification docs at https://docs.vulkan.org/glsl/latest/index.html, consult cached local copies under .GLSL-Encyclopedia/ before re-fetching, and record useful authoritative excerpts plus environment-specific operational learnings so future work gets faster, safer, and more grounded.
This skill is for the GLSL language/spec layer. It should trigger for real GLSL syntax/semantic/interface questions, not for generic rendering talk and not for Vulkan API questions unless the actual issue is specifically about GLSL shader source.
Workflow
-
Classify the task
- Decide whether the task is a GLSL language question, shader-authoring task, shader-review task, compiler-error/debugging task, stage-specific behavior question, or cross-language translation/comparison task where GLSL is one side.
- Use this skill when the task materially depends on GLSL syntax, qualifiers, types, built-ins, interface/layout rules, stage rules, preprocessor/version behavior, or shader authoring semantics.
- Do not use this skill for generic rendering concepts, generic Vulkan API debugging, or non-GLSL shader languages unless the GLSL language layer is actually in play.
-
Check local cache first
- Use
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/as the local knowledge/cache root. - Check these locations first when relevant:
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/docs/docs.vulkan.org/glsl/latest/....GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/components/....GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/patterns/....GLSL-Encyclopedia/inventory/...
- If a cached page or note already answers the question well enough, use it.
- Use
-
Consult authoritative GLSL docs before answering or acting
- Before answering direct or indirect GLSL questions that depend on exact syntax, qualifier behavior, type rules, stage restrictions, built-in variable/function semantics, layout/interface rules, or version-sensitive details, consult the official GLSL docs unless the answer is already well-supported by the local cache.
- Before performing non-trivial GLSL shader review or authoring guidance, consult the relevant docs first when:
- exact language syntax or legal combinations matter
- stage-specific behavior or interface matching is easy to misremember
- the task involves compile errors, layout rules, extension/version behavior, or built-in semantics
- If the problem is really about Vulkan API object behavior, synchronization, descriptors, swapchains, or VUID-driven valid-usage rules rather than GLSL language semantics, prefer the Vulkan skill instead of stretching this one.
- Do not improvise fragile GLSL answers from memory when the docs are easy to check.
-
Cache consulted docs locally
- When you consult a GLSL docs page, save a normalized cache copy under
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/docs/docs.vulkan.org/glsl/latest/.... - Mirror the official docs path structure as much as practical.
- Cache only pages actually consulted; do not try to mirror the whole GLSL spec eagerly.
- Use
scripts/cache_doc.pywhen appropriate.
- When you consult a GLSL docs page, save a normalized cache copy under
-
Separate authoritative documentation from local observations
- Store official-doc-derived material under
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/docs/.... - Store environment-specific operational knowledge under:
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/components/.GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/patterns/.GLSL-Encyclopedia/inventory/
- Distinguish clearly between:
- authoritative documented behavior
- observed project/environment shader conventions
- inferred best-practice guidance
- Store official-doc-derived material under
-
Record useful local learnings
- After useful live work, save durable notes such as:
- project-specific shader conventions
- recurring compile/validation-error patterns
- stage-interface or layout gotchas
- version/extension adoption decisions
- safe/unsafe operational boundaries for the codebase or environment
- Prefer concise durable notes over re-learning the same GLSL details later.
- After useful live work, save durable notes such as:
Live Work Rules
- Treat authoritative GLSL docs lookup as the default preflight for non-trivial GLSL work.
- Prefer read/inspect first when entering unfamiliar shader code.
- Treat stage interfaces, layout qualifiers, buffer/image/sampler usage, preprocessor/version behavior, built-in semantics, and compiler-error interpretation as higher-sensitivity areas.
- When uncertainty remains after checking cache + docs, say so and avoid bluffing.
- When answering a question, mention when useful whether the answer comes from cached official docs, a fresh official docs lookup, or live observed shader/project state.
Data Root
Use this workspace-local root for cache and notes:
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/
Expected structure:
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/docs/docs.vulkan.org/glsl/latest/....GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/components/....GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/patterns/....GLSL-Encyclopedia/inventory/...
Use scripts/init_workspace.py to create or repair the expected directory structure.
Note Destinations
- Component-specific observations →
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/components/\x3Ccomponent-name>.md - Reusable GLSL patterns/gotchas →
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/notes/patterns/\x3Ctopic>.md - Environment-wide shader/access info →
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/inventory/*.md - Cached official docs →
.GLSL-Encyclopedia/docs/docs.vulkan.org/glsl/latest/...
Secrets / Sensitive Data
- Do not store plaintext credentials, API keys, session tokens, private URLs, recovery codes, or other secrets in the encyclopedia notes/inventory tree.
- If a note needs to mention access details, keep it high-level and redact or omit secret material.
- Treat these workspace notes as operational memory, not as a secrets vault.
Resources
scripts/init_workspace.py— create or repair the.GLSL-Encyclopedia/directory tree.scripts/cache_doc.py— fetch and cache a consulted official GLSL docs page under.GLSL-Encyclopedia/docs/....references/workflow.md— detailed operating workflow and evidence-handling rules.references/cache-layout.md— canonical.GLSL-Encyclopedia/directory structure.references/topic-map.md— useful GLSL topic groupings for faster authoritative lookup.
Good Outcomes
- Answer a GLSL question using cached or freshly checked official docs instead of guesswork.
- Inspect GLSL shader code after checking the relevant docs and record any new project-specific language or convention knowledge.
- Build a growing local GLSL knowledge cache that makes later work faster, safer, and more grounded.
- Turn one-off GLSL discoveries into durable notes so future work does not rediscover them from scratch.
Avoid
- Answering GLSL-specific questions purely from memory when the docs are easy to consult.
- Treating local project shader conventions as if they were guaranteed authoritative GLSL behavior.
- Dumping large amounts of low-value docs into the workspace without a reason.
- Writing project-specific observations into the official-doc cache tree.
- Confusing generic Vulkan API questions with GLSL language questions when the actual issue is not about GLSL itself.
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install glsl-encyclopedia - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/glsl-encyclopedia - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is GLSL Encyclopedia?
GLSL language/specification workflow for GLSL-specific questions, shader authoring and review, exact syntax and semantic lookup, built-in and qualifier refer... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 120 downloads so far.
How do I install GLSL Encyclopedia?
Run "/install glsl-encyclopedia" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is GLSL Encyclopedia free?
Yes, GLSL Encyclopedia is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does GLSL Encyclopedia support?
GLSL Encyclopedia is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created GLSL Encyclopedia?
It is built and maintained by kklouzal (@kklouzal); the current version is v0.1.0.