parallel-worktrees
Create and manage git worktrees for parallel coding sessions. Enable zero-dead-time development by running tests, builds, and multiple branch sessions simultaneously without interference.
Discover reusable agent skills, browse implementation details, and find the right skill for your workflow.
215 skills found
Create and manage git worktrees for parallel coding sessions. Enable zero-dead-time development by running tests, builds, and multiple branch sessions simultaneously without interference.
Framework for orchestrating long-running agentic tasks, evidence-based delivery, and automated QA gates following Simon Willison's iterative loop.
Provider-agnostic MCP skill for wait-for-change automation on PR events like status checks, merges, and comments.
Automates the creation of isolated git worktree environments for parallel feature development and environment setup.
Parallel task orchestration CLI for AI workers using isolated git workspaces.
A pre-flight release checklist system to verify build paths, tests, and CI status before tagging, preventing failed deployments and repetitive retagging cycles.
A comprehensive guide for using Bun as a high-performance alternative to Node.js. Supports project initialization, dependency management, script execution, and migration checklists.
Orchestrate multi-agent AI swarms using the ClawTeam CLI to automate parallel task execution, dependency management, and team collaboration with git worktree isolation and tmux support.
Implement secure, tokenless npm publishing in GitHub Actions using OIDC, provenance attestations, and monorepo-friendly configuration.
Validates cross-artifact consistency (spec, plan, tasks) and detects breaking changes (API, DB, UI) during software feature development.
Manage Fly.io edge infrastructure: deploy apps, scale machines, configure volumes, secrets, and networking via the Fly.io Machines API. Python-based, zero-dependency.
Generates structured Handoff Pack prompts for delegating scoped coding tasks to Gemini with clear instructions, acceptance criteria, and output requirements.