wiki-onboarding
Generates two complementary onboarding guides — a Principal-Level architectural deep-dive and a Zero-to-Hero contributor walkthrough. Use when the user wants onboarding documentation fo...
Best use case
wiki-onboarding is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Generates two complementary onboarding guides — a Principal-Level architectural deep-dive and a Zero-to-Hero contributor walkthrough. Use when the user wants onboarding documentation fo...
Teams using wiki-onboarding 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
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/wiki-onboarding/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How wiki-onboarding Compares
| Feature / Agent | wiki-onboarding | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Generates two complementary onboarding guides — a Principal-Level architectural deep-dive and a Zero-to-Hero contributor walkthrough. Use when the user wants onboarding documentation fo...
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
# Wiki Onboarding Guide Generator Generate two complementary onboarding documents that together give any engineer — from newcomer to principal — a complete understanding of a codebase. ## When to Activate - User asks for onboarding docs or getting-started guides - User runs `/deep-wiki:onboard` command - User wants to help new team members understand a codebase ## Language Detection Scan the repository for build files to determine the primary language for code examples: - `package.json` / `tsconfig.json` → TypeScript/JavaScript - `*.csproj` / `*.sln` → C# / .NET - `Cargo.toml` → Rust - `pyproject.toml` / `setup.py` / `requirements.txt` → Python - `go.mod` → Go - `pom.xml` / `build.gradle` → Java ## Guide 1: Principal-Level Onboarding **Audience**: Senior/staff+ engineers who need the "why" behind decisions. ### Required Sections 1. **System Philosophy & Design Principles** — What invariants does the system maintain? What were the key design choices and why? 2. **Architecture Overview** — Component map with Mermaid diagram. What owns what, communication patterns. 3. **Key Abstractions & Interfaces** — The load-bearing abstractions everything depends on 4. **Decision Log** — Major architectural decisions with context, alternatives considered, trade-offs 5. **Dependency Rationale** — Why each major dependency was chosen, what it replaced 6. **Data Flow & State** — How data moves through the system (traced from actual code, not guessed) 7. **Failure Modes & Error Handling** — What breaks, how errors propagate, recovery patterns 8. **Performance Characteristics** — Bottlenecks, scaling limits, hot paths 9. **Security Model** — Auth, authorization, trust boundaries, data sensitivity 10. **Testing Strategy** — What's tested, what isn't, testing philosophy 11. **Operational Concerns** — Deployment, monitoring, feature flags, configuration 12. **Known Technical Debt** — Honest assessment of shortcuts and their risks ### Rules - Every claim backed by `(file_path:line_number)` citation - Minimum 3 Mermaid diagrams (architecture, data flow, dependency graph) - All Mermaid diagrams use dark-mode colors (see wiki-vitepress skill) - Focus on WHY decisions were made, not just WHAT exists ## Guide 2: Zero-to-Hero Contributor Guide **Audience**: New contributors who need step-by-step practical guidance. ### Required Sections 1. **What This Project Does** — 2-3 sentence elevator pitch 2. **Prerequisites** — Tools, versions, accounts needed 3. **Environment Setup** — Step-by-step with exact commands, expected output at each step 4. **Project Structure** — Annotated directory tree (what lives where and why) 5. **Your First Task** — End-to-end walkthrough of adding a simple feature 6. **Development Workflow** — Branch strategy, commit conventions, PR process 7. **Running Tests** — How to run tests, what to test, how to add a test 8. **Debugging Guide** — Common issues and how to diagnose them 9. **Key Concepts** — Domain-specific terminology explained with code examples 10. **Code Patterns** — "If you want to add X, follow this pattern" templates 11. **Common Pitfalls** — Mistakes every new contributor makes and how to avoid them 12. **Where to Get Help** — Communication channels, documentation, key contacts 13. **Glossary** — Terms used in the codebase that aren't obvious 14. **Quick Reference Card** — Cheat sheet of most-used commands and patterns ### Rules - All code examples in the detected primary language - Every command must be copy-pasteable - Include expected output for verification steps - Use Mermaid for workflow diagrams (dark-mode colors) - Ground all claims in actual code — cite `(file_path:line_number)` ## When to Use This skill is applicable to execute the workflow or actions described in the overview.
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