/install oc-skill-creator
OpenClaw Skill Creator
Create, improve, and maintain OpenClaw AgentSkills. This guide covers the full lifecycle from pattern extraction through testing.
Why This Skill Exists
OpenClaw skills are not just simple prompt files. Skills designed for OpenClaw's architecture — 3-layer loading (description → body → references), sub-agent context injection, Phase 0 analysis — significantly improve agent quality. This skill systematizes those design principles and provides validated examples across 5 types (pipeline, single-task, tool integration, code generation, document conversion).
Language Policy
- SKILL.md body: Always write in English — this ensures the skill works across all language environments
- references/: English by default. Localized copies may be provided as
filename.ko.md,filename.ja.md,filename.zh.md - description Keywords: Include keywords in all target languages (English, Korean, Japanese, Chinese)
- Generated skills: Follow the same policy — English body, multilingual keywords
Key Strengths
- OpenClaw-native patterns — Optimized for OpenClaw architecture: sub-agent context fork, references/ lazy loading, Phase 0 structural analysis
- 5 validated types — examples/ includes actual generated skills and case analyses for each type
- Style Guide-centric — Skills that specify "what to preserve" and "what to compress" determine agent quality
- skill-audit integration — Validate generated skills with skill-audit to get 0-100 scores and improvement recommendations
- Bundled skill porting — Checklist for porting existing Codex-based bundled skills to OpenClaw patterns
OpenClaw Skill Anatomy
skill-name/
├── SKILL.md # Required. Frontmatter + instructions.
├── references/ # Optional. Loaded on demand by the agent.
│ ├── output-format.md # Output specifications
│ └── subagent-prompt-templates.md # Sub-agent prompt templates
├── scripts/ # Optional. Executable code (Python/Bash/etc.)
│ ├── extract_epub.py
│ └── extract_pdf.py
├── assets/ # Optional. Files used in output, not loaded into context.
│ └── template.html
└── examples/ # Optional. Example files for reference.
DO NOT create: README.md, CHANGELOG.md, INSTALLATION_GUIDE.md, QUICK_REFERENCE.md, LICENSE, or similar auxiliary documentation.
Frontmatter (Required)
---
name: skill-name
description: >
What this skill does and when it should trigger.
Include keywords in multiple languages.
Keywords: keyword1, keyword2, 키워드1, 키워드2.
---
name: lowercase, hyphens only. Under 64 chars. Prefer short, verb-led names.description: This is the primary triggering mechanism. OpenClaw reads this to decide when to load the skill. Include:- What the skill does
- When to use it (triggers, contexts)
- Keywords in all relevant languages (localized + English)
- Do NOT put "when to use" info in the body — it's only loaded AFTER triggering.
Loading Architecture
OpenClaw loads skills in three layers:
- Metadata (name + description) — Always in context. ~100 words per skill.
- SKILL.md body — Loaded when the skill triggers. Keep under 500 lines.
- references/ — Loaded on demand when the agent decides it's needed.
Implication: Every word in description is always costing tokens. Be concise. Every word in SKILL.md costs tokens when the skill triggers. Keep it lean.
Skill Creation: 5-Step Process
Step 1: Analyze "Well-Done" Results
Before writing anything, analyze examples of the agent performing the task well without a skill.
Ask:
- What structure did the output have?
- What did the agent preserve (examples, metaphors, quotes, data)?
- What did the agent compress (repetition, verbose explanations)?
- What judgments did the agent make (grouping, prioritization, restructuring)?
- Why did it make those judgments?
This analysis becomes the Style Guide. This is the most important step. A skill that only specifies format but not style produces dry, mediocre results.
Step 2: Analyze "Failed" Results (if available)
If sub-agents or previous skill versions produced bad results, identify exactly what went wrong:
| Symptom | Likely Cause |
|---|---|
| Output is dry/bland | Missing style guide — no "what to preserve" rules |
| Flow is disconnected | Chunks processed independently — missing Phase 0 context injection |
| Lots of duplication | Missing merge/restructure instructions |
| Inconsistent style | No style rules in sub-agent prompts |
| Sub-agent ignores instructions | Sub-agent prompt lacks context from Phase 0 |
Every failure maps to a specific instruction to add to the skill.
Step 3: Write Style Guide First
Write the Style Guide before the workflow. The workflow is "what order" — the Style Guide is "how to judge."
## Style Guide
### Essence
- What is the core of this task? (e.g., "Summarization is restructuring, not compression.")
- What perspective should the agent take?
### Preservation Criteria (NEVER discard)
- Specific examples with "why"
### Compression Criteria (what to reduce)
- Specific examples with "why"
### Style Rules
- Tone, sentence length, formatting conventions
- Rules specific to this context
Step 4: Structure the Workflow
Build the workflow around the Style Guide:
## Workflow
### Phase 0: [Analysis Step] (★ Most Important)
What to analyze before starting, and where that information gets used.
### Phase 1~N: [Execution Steps]
Each step's specific instructions.
### Phase N+1: [Validation Step]
How to verify the output meets quality standards.
Key principles:
- Phase 0 first — analyze the full input before dividing into chunks or delegating
- Context injection for sub-agents — sub-agents have NO context from the main session. Phase 0 results must be explicitly injected into sub-agent prompts.
- Validation step — check output length, structure, and quality
Step 5: Split into References (if needed)
If SKILL.md approaches 500 lines, split:
| Content type | Where to put it |
|---|---|
| Output structure/specifications | references/output-format.md |
| Sub-agent prompt templates | references/subagent-prompt-templates.md |
| Domain knowledge (APIs, schemas) | references/domain.md |
| Examples | references/examples.md |
Always link references from SKILL.md with a description of when to read them.
Sub-Agent Design Patterns
Sub-agents are the #1 source of skill quality degradation. The root cause is always the same: the sub-agent lacks context that the main agent has.
Pattern A: Context Injection
Always include in sub-agent prompts:
- Full context — "This chunk is part of [overall structure]. It covers [topic]."
- Specific preservation list — "In this chunk, preserve: [metaphor, quote, example]"
- Judgment criteria — 3-4 lines from Style Guide
- Output format — How to format the result
Pattern B: Template with Fill-in-the-Blanks
Don't copy templates verbatim. Use [ ] placeholders filled from Phase 0:
Sub-agent prompt template (fill `[ ]` from Phase 0 results):
## Context
[Overall structure from Phase 0]
[This chunk's position in the whole]
## Preserve (this chunk only)
[Specific items from Phase 0]
## Instructions
[Depth/format/style rules]
---
[Chunk text]
---
If Phase 0 didn't produce [ ] values, the template can't be filled. The sub-agent becomes a context-free "text compressor." This is why Phase 0 is mandatory.
Pattern C: Sequential Pipeline
When multiple depth levels exist (e.g., 1x and 5x), use sequential dependency:
depth=1x: Analyze → Chunk → Summarize → Merge → summary.md
depth=5x: Analyze → Chunk → Summarize → Merge → summary.md
→ Use summary.md as skeleton → Expand → summary_5x.md
Why sequential? The simpler output provides structure for the complex one. Starting with the complex version means each chunk is independently summarized, losing overall flow.
Pattern D: Merge ≠ Concatenate
When merging multiple chunk results:
- Never just concatenate
- Restructure according to Phase 0's topic flow
- Remove duplicates (keep the most detailed version)
- Derive overall takeaways (not just chunk summaries)
Skill File Organization Rules
Keep SKILL.md Lean
- Under 500 lines — split into references/ if longer
- Only in SKILL.md: Workflow phases, Style Guide summary, parameter tables, reference links
- In references/: Detailed specs, prompt templates, domain knowledge, examples
Reference File Best Practices
- One level deep — all reference files link directly from SKILL.md, not from other references
- Table of contents — for reference files over 100 lines
- Never duplicate — information lives in either SKILL.md OR a reference file, never both
Workspace Skills vs Bundled Skills
Workspace (~/.openclaw/workspace/skills/) |
Bundled (/app/skills/) |
|
|---|---|---|
| Persistence | Survives container restarts | Reset on container restart |
| Scope | User-specific, project-specific | Shared, system-wide |
| When to use | Custom workflows, domain knowledge | Universal tools (weather, discord, etc.) |
| Source of truth | This directory for new custom skills | Reference only, don't modify |
Always create custom skills in workspace. Never modify bundled skills.
Skill Improvement & Auditing
Audit Checklist
For any skill, check:
Triggering
-
descriptionclearly explains when to trigger? - Keywords in relevant languages?
- No "when to use" sections in body (should be in description)?
Style Guide
- "What to preserve" with specific examples?
- "What to compress" with specific examples?
- Style rules explicit?
Workflow
- Phase 0 (analysis) comes first?
- Sub-agent context injection specified?
- Validation/quality check step exists?
Sub-agent Integration
- Prompt templates have
[ ]placeholders filled from Phase 0? - Clear warning about what happens without context injection?
File Organization
- SKILL.md under 500 lines?
- Long content split to references/?
- Each reference file describes when to read it?
Common Anti-Patterns
| Anti-Pattern | Problem | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Format-only, no style | Dry, mediocre output | Add Style Guide |
| Sub-agent without context | Disconnected chunks | Add Phase 0 + context injection |
| Simple concatenation | Duplication, no flow | Add restructure instructions |
| Arbitrary chunk boundaries | Content cut mid-section | "Cut only at section/chapter boundaries" |
| Parallel depth generation | Inconsistent structures | Sequential pipeline (simple → complex) |
| Template used verbatim | Context-free instructions | Fill [ ] from Phase 0 results |
| "When to use" in body | Never read (body loads after trigger) | Move to description |
References
references/openclaw-vs-codex.md— Differences from the bundled Codex skill-creator and porting checklistexamples/summarize.md— Validation example: summarize skill (sub-agent pipeline type)examples/changelog.md— Validation example: changelog skill (doc conversion type)examples/scaffold.md— Validation example: scaffold skill (code generation type)examples/screenshot-capture.md— Validation example: screenshot-capture skill (tool integration type)examples/unit-converter.md— Validation example: unit-converter skill (single-task type)examples/skill-audit.md— Validation example: skill-audit (meta validation tool)
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install oc-skill-creator - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/oc-skill-creator - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
What is Skill Creator?
Create, edit, improve, tidy, review, audit, or restructure OpenClaw AgentSkills and SKILL.md files. Optimized for OpenClaw's architecture: sub-agents, contex... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 58 downloads so far.
How do I install Skill Creator?
Run "/install oc-skill-creator" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Skill Creator free?
Yes, Skill Creator is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Skill Creator support?
Skill Creator is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Skill Creator?
It is built and maintained by haseo-ai (@haseo-ai); the current version is v1.0.0.