tessl i github:jdrhyne/agent-skills --skill remotion-best-practicesBest practices for Remotion - Video creation in React
Validation
69%| Criteria | Description | Result |
|---|---|---|
description_trigger_hint | Description may be missing an explicit 'when to use' trigger hint (e.g., 'Use when...') | Warning |
metadata_version | 'metadata.version' is missing | Warning |
license_field | 'license' field is missing | Warning |
body_output_format | No obvious output/return/format terms detected; consider specifying expected outputs | Warning |
body_steps | No step-by-step structure detected (no ordered list); consider adding a simple workflow | Warning |
Total | 11 / 16 Passed | |
Implementation
73%This skill functions well as an index/navigation document for Remotion best practices, with excellent token efficiency and progressive disclosure. However, it lacks any quick-start examples or workflow guidance that would help users know where to begin or how to approach common Remotion tasks.
Suggestions
Add a 'Quick start' section with 1-2 minimal executable code examples showing basic Remotion patterns
Include a 'Common workflows' section that sequences related rules (e.g., 'For video with captions: see videos.md → transcribe-captions.md → display-captions.md')
Group the rule links by category (e.g., 'Media', 'Animation', 'Text', 'Advanced') to improve discoverability
| Dimension | Reasoning | Score |
|---|---|---|
Conciseness | Extremely lean and efficient - just a brief 'when to use' statement followed by a well-organized list of references. No unnecessary explanations of what Remotion is or how React works. | 3 / 3 |
Actionability | Provides clear navigation to detailed rule files, but the skill itself contains no executable code or concrete examples. Users must follow links to get actionable guidance. | 2 / 3 |
Workflow Clarity | The list is organized but lacks any guidance on which rules to read first, common workflows, or how different rules relate to each other. No sequencing for typical Remotion development tasks. | 2 / 3 |
Progressive Disclosure | Excellent progressive disclosure - serves as a clear index/overview with one-level-deep references to specific rule files. Each link has a descriptive summary, making navigation easy. | 3 / 3 |
Total | 10 / 12 Passed |
Activation
22%This description is too brief and vague to effectively guide skill selection. It identifies the technology (Remotion) but fails to specify concrete capabilities or provide any trigger conditions. The phrase 'best practices' is particularly unhelpful as it doesn't describe actionable functionality.
Suggestions
Add specific concrete actions like 'Create video compositions, render frames, add animations, configure audio tracks, and export videos programmatically'
Include a 'Use when...' clause with trigger terms such as 'Remotion', 'programmatic video', 'React video', 'video rendering', or 'video composition'
Expand trigger terms to include common user phrases like 'generate video', 'video from code', 'animated video', or 'render video'
| Dimension | Reasoning | Score |
|---|---|---|
Specificity | The description only mentions 'best practices' and 'video creation in React' without listing any concrete actions like rendering, composing scenes, adding animations, or exporting videos. | 1 / 3 |
Completeness | Only partially addresses 'what' (best practices for Remotion) and completely lacks any 'when' clause or explicit trigger guidance for when Claude should select this skill. | 1 / 3 |
Trigger Term Quality | Contains some relevant keywords ('Remotion', 'Video', 'React') that users might naturally say, but misses common variations like 'programmatic video', 'video rendering', 'animation', or file extensions. | 2 / 3 |
Distinctiveness Conflict Risk | 'Remotion' is a specific technology which helps distinguish it, but 'video creation in React' could overlap with other React media libraries or general video editing skills. | 2 / 3 |
Total | 6 / 12 Passed |
Reviewed
Table of Contents
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