c4-code

Expert C4 Code-level documentation specialist. Analyzes code directories to create comprehensive C4 code-level documentation including function signatures, arguments, dependencies, and code structure.

6 stars

Best use case

c4-code is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.

Expert C4 Code-level documentation specialist. Analyzes code directories to create comprehensive C4 code-level documentation including function signatures, arguments, dependencies, and code structure.

Teams using c4-code should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.

When to use this skill

  • You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.

When not to use this skill

  • You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/c4-code/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/netbarros/psique/main/.codex/skills/c4-code/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/c4-code/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How c4-code Compares

Feature / Agentc4-codeStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Expert C4 Code-level documentation specialist. Analyzes code directories to create comprehensive C4 code-level documentation including function signatures, arguments, dependencies, and code structure.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# C4 Code Level: [Directory Name]

## Use this skill when

- Working on c4 code level: [directory name] tasks or workflows
- Needing guidance, best practices, or checklists for c4 code level: [directory name]

## Do not use this skill when

- The task is unrelated to c4 code level: [directory name]
- You need a different domain or tool outside this scope

## Instructions

- Clarify goals, constraints, and required inputs.
- Apply relevant best practices and validate outcomes.
- Provide actionable steps and verification.
- If detailed examples are required, open `resources/implementation-playbook.md`.

## Overview

- **Name**: [Descriptive name for this code directory]
- **Description**: [Short description of what this code does]
- **Location**: [Link to actual directory path]
- **Language**: [Primary programming language(s)]
- **Purpose**: [What this code accomplishes]

## Code Elements

### Functions/Methods

- `functionName(param1: Type, param2: Type): ReturnType`
  - Description: [What this function does]
  - Location: [file path:line number]
  - Dependencies: [what this function depends on]

### Classes/Modules

- `ClassName`
  - Description: [What this class does]
  - Location: [file path]
  - Methods: [list of methods]
  - Dependencies: [what this class depends on]

## Dependencies

### Internal Dependencies

- [List of internal code dependencies]

### External Dependencies

- [List of external libraries, frameworks, services]

## Relationships

Optional Mermaid diagrams for complex code structures. Choose the diagram type based on the programming paradigm. Code diagrams show the **internal structure of a single component**.

### Object-Oriented Code (Classes, Interfaces)

Use `classDiagram` for OOP code with classes, interfaces, and inheritance:

```mermaid
---
title: Code Diagram for [Component Name]
---
classDiagram
    namespace ComponentName {
        class Class1 {
            +attribute1 Type
            +method1() ReturnType
        }
        class Class2 {
            -privateAttr Type
            +publicMethod() void
        }
        class Interface1 {
            <<interface>>
            +requiredMethod() ReturnType
        }
    }

    Class1 ..|> Interface1 : implements
    Class1 --> Class2 : uses
```
````

### Functional/Procedural Code (Modules, Functions)

For functional or procedural code, you have two options:

**Option A: Module Structure Diagram** - Use `classDiagram` to show modules and their exported functions:

```mermaid
---
title: Module Structure for [Component Name]
---
classDiagram
    namespace DataProcessing {
        class validators {
            <<module>>
            +validateInput(data) Result~Data, Error~
            +validateSchema(schema, data) bool
            +sanitize(input) string
        }
        class transformers {
            <<module>>
            +parseJSON(raw) Record
            +normalize(data) NormalizedData
            +aggregate(items) Summary
        }
        class io {
            <<module>>
            +readFile(path) string
            +writeFile(path, content) void
        }
    }

    transformers --> validators : uses
    transformers --> io : reads from
```

**Option B: Data Flow Diagram** - Use `flowchart` to show function pipelines and data transformations:

```mermaid
---
title: Data Pipeline for [Component Name]
---
flowchart LR
    subgraph Input
        A[readFile]
    end
    subgraph Transform
        B[parseJSON]
        C[validateInput]
        D[normalize]
        E[aggregate]
    end
    subgraph Output
        F[writeFile]
    end

    A -->|raw string| B
    B -->|parsed data| C
    C -->|valid data| D
    D -->|normalized| E
    E -->|summary| F
```

**Option C: Function Dependency Graph** - Use `flowchart` to show which functions call which:

```mermaid
---
title: Function Dependencies for [Component Name]
---
flowchart TB
    subgraph Public API
        processData[processData]
        exportReport[exportReport]
    end
    subgraph Internal Functions
        validate[validate]
        transform[transform]
        format[format]
        cache[memoize]
    end
    subgraph Pure Utilities
        compose[compose]
        pipe[pipe]
        curry[curry]
    end

    processData --> validate
    processData --> transform
    processData --> cache
    transform --> compose
    transform --> pipe
    exportReport --> format
    exportReport --> processData
```

### Choosing the Right Diagram

| Code Style                       | Primary Diagram                  | When to Use                                             |
| -------------------------------- | -------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------- |
| OOP (classes, interfaces)        | `classDiagram`                   | Show inheritance, composition, interface implementation |
| FP (pure functions, pipelines)   | `flowchart`                      | Show data transformations and function composition      |
| FP (modules with exports)        | `classDiagram` with `<<module>>` | Show module structure and dependencies                  |
| Procedural (structs + functions) | `classDiagram`                   | Show data structures and associated functions           |
| Mixed                            | Combination                      | Use multiple diagrams if needed                         |

**Note**: According to the [C4 model](https://c4model.com/diagrams), code diagrams are typically only created when needed for complex components. Most teams find system context and container diagrams sufficient. Choose the diagram type that best communicates the code structure regardless of paradigm.

## Notes

[Any additional context or important information]

```

## Example Interactions

### Object-Oriented Codebases
- "Analyze the src/api directory and create C4 Code-level documentation"
- "Document the service layer code with complete class hierarchies and dependencies"
- "Create C4 Code documentation showing interface implementations in the repository layer"

### Functional/Procedural Codebases
- "Document all functions in the authentication module with their signatures and data flow"
- "Create a data pipeline diagram for the ETL transformers in src/pipeline"
- "Analyze the utils directory and document all pure functions and their composition patterns"
- "Document the Rust modules in src/handlers showing function dependencies"
- "Create C4 Code documentation for the Elixir GenServer modules"

### Mixed Paradigm
- "Document the Go handlers package showing structs and their associated functions"
- "Analyze the TypeScript codebase that mixes classes with functional utilities"

## Key Distinctions
- **vs C4-Component agent**: Focuses on individual code elements; Component agent synthesizes multiple code files into components
- **vs C4-Container agent**: Documents code structure; Container agent maps components to deployment units
- **vs C4-Context agent**: Provides code-level detail; Context agent creates high-level system diagrams

## Output Examples
When analyzing code, provide:
- Complete function/method signatures with all parameters and return types
- Clear descriptions of what each code element does
- Links to actual source code locations
- Complete dependency lists (internal and external)
- Structured documentation following C4 Code-level template
- Mermaid diagrams for complex code relationships when needed
- Consistent naming and formatting across all code documentation

```

Related Skills

zustand-store-ts

6
from netbarros/psique

Create Zustand stores with TypeScript, subscribeWithSelector middleware, and proper state/action separation. Use when building React state management, creating global stores, or implementing reacti...

zoom-automation

6
from netbarros/psique

Automate Zoom meeting creation, management, recordings, webinars, and participant tracking via Rube MCP (Composio). Always search tools first for current schemas.

zoho-crm-automation

6
from netbarros/psique

Automate Zoho CRM tasks via Rube MCP (Composio): create/update records, search contacts, manage leads, and convert leads. Always search tools first for current schemas.

zendesk-automation

6
from netbarros/psique

Automate Zendesk tasks via Rube MCP (Composio): tickets, users, organizations, replies. Always search tools first for current schemas.

zapier-make-patterns

6
from netbarros/psique

No-code automation democratizes workflow building. Zapier and Make (formerly Integromat) let non-developers automate business processes without writing code. But no-code doesn't mean no-complexity ...

youtube-summarizer

6
from netbarros/psique

Extract transcripts from YouTube videos and generate comprehensive, detailed summaries using intelligent analysis frameworks

youtube-automation

6
from netbarros/psique

Automate YouTube tasks via Rube MCP (Composio): upload videos, manage playlists, search content, get analytics, and handle comments. Always search tools first for current schemas.

xss-html-injection

6
from netbarros/psique

This skill should be used when the user asks to "test for XSS vulnerabilities", "perform cross-site scripting attacks", "identify HTML injection flaws", "exploit client-side injection...

xlsx-official

6
from netbarros/psique

Comprehensive spreadsheet creation, editing, and analysis with support for formulas, formatting, data analysis, and visualization. When Claude needs to work with spreadsheets (.xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, ....

x-twitter-scraper

6
from netbarros/psique

X (Twitter) data platform skill — tweet search, user lookup, follower extraction, engagement metrics, giveaway draws, monitoring, webhooks, 19 extraction tools, MCP server.

x-article-publisher-skill

6
from netbarros/psique

Publish articles to X/Twitter

writing-skills

6
from netbarros/psique

Use when creating, updating, or improving agent skills.