Capture Skill from Conversation
This skill helps you extract knowledge, patterns, and workflows from the current conversation and persist them as a reusable skill.
When to Use
- •The user says "capture this as a skill" or "save this for next time"
- •A useful workflow, pattern, or piece of domain knowledge emerged during the conversation
- •The user wants to update an existing skill with new learnings
- •The conversation uncovered non-obvious steps, gotchas, or best practices worth preserving
Capture Process
Phase 1: Identify What to Capture
Review the conversation for:
- •Workflows: Multi-step processes that were figured out through trial and error
- •Domain knowledge: Non-obvious facts, configurations, or constraints discovered
- •Gotchas and fixes: Problems encountered and their solutions
- •Patterns: Code patterns, command sequences, or templates that worked well
- •Decision rationale: Why certain approaches were chosen over alternatives
Summarize what you plan to capture and confirm with the user before proceeding.
Phase 2: Decide Destination
If the user already specified a skill or the destination is obvious from context, just proceed. Otherwise, use the AskQuestion tool (or ask conversationally) to clarify:
- •
New or existing skill?
- •If existing: Which skill to update? (list relevant skills from
~/.cursor/skills/and.cursor/skills/) - •If new: What should it be named?
- •If existing: Which skill to update? (list relevant skills from
- •
Storage location (for new skills):
- •Personal (
~/.cursor/skills/) — available across all projects - •Project (
.cursor/skills/) — shared with the repository
- •Personal (
Phase 3: Draft the Skill Content
When capturing into a new skill:
- •Choose a descriptive name (lowercase, hyphens, max 64 chars)
- •Write a specific description including WHAT and WHEN (third person)
- •Distill the conversation into concise, actionable instructions
- •Include concrete examples drawn from the conversation
- •Add any utility scripts or commands that were used
When updating an existing skill:
- •Read the existing SKILL.md
- •Identify where new learnings fit (new section, updated steps, additional examples)
- •Integrate without duplicating existing content
- •Preserve the existing structure and voice
Phase 4: Distillation Guidelines
The goal is to transform a messy conversation into clean, reusable instructions.
Do:
- •Extract the final working approach, not the failed attempts (unless gotchas are instructive)
- •Generalize from the specific case discussed (replace hardcoded values with placeholders)
- •Include the "why" behind non-obvious steps
- •Add context the agent wouldn't know without this conversation
- •Keep it under 500 lines
Don't:
- •Include conversation artifacts ("as we discussed", "you mentioned")
- •Repeat information the agent already knows
- •Include overly specific details that won't transfer to other situations
- •Add verbose explanations where a code example suffices
Phase 5: Write and Verify
- •Create/update the skill file(s)
- •Verify the SKILL.md is under 500 lines
- •Check that the description is specific and includes trigger terms
- •Confirm with the user that the captured content is accurate
Example: Capturing a Debugging Workflow
If a conversation involved debugging a tricky deployment issue, the captured skill might look like:
--- name: debug-k8s-deployments description: Debug Kubernetes deployment failures including CrashLoopBackOff, image pull errors, and resource limits. Use when pods are failing to start or deployments are stuck. --- # Debug K8s Deployments ## Diagnostic Steps 1. Check pod status: `kubectl get pods -n <namespace> | grep -v Running` 2. Get events: `kubectl describe pod <pod> -n <namespace>` 3. Check logs: `kubectl logs <pod> -n <namespace> --previous` ## Common Issues ### CrashLoopBackOff - Check if the entrypoint command exists in the container - Verify environment variables are set (especially secrets) - Look for OOMKilled in `describe` output → increase memory limits ### ImagePullBackOff - Verify image tag exists: `docker manifest inspect <image>` - Check imagePullSecrets are configured for private registries
Note how this captures the diagnostic sequence and common solutions without any conversation artifacts.
Handling Edge Cases
Conversation had multiple topics: Ask which specific learning to capture, or suggest creating separate skills for distinct topics.
Learning is too small for a skill: Suggest creating a Cursor rule (.cursor/rules/) instead, which is better suited for single-line or short guidelines.
Existing skill needs major rewrite: Confirm with the user whether to restructure the existing skill or create a new one that supersedes it.