skills/arabelatso/skills-4-se/reference-searcher

reference-searcher

SKILL.md

Reference Searcher

Structured methodology for searching external references — official docs, open-source implementations, and web resources — to inform development decisions.

When to Use This Skill

  • Working with unfamiliar libraries or frameworks
  • Needing production-quality implementation examples
  • Debugging unexpected behavior from external dependencies
  • Finding best practices for specific patterns (auth, caching, etc.)
  • Evaluating library choices with real-world usage data

What This Skill Does

Search Strategy: Three Layers

Layer 1: Official Documentation

Search official docs for the specific library using web search:

# Search official docs directly
# e.g., "next.js middleware authentication site:nextjs.org"
# Or use documentation MCP tools if available (e.g., Context7)

Best for: API signatures, configuration options, migration guides, official patterns.

Layer 2: Open-Source Implementation Examples (GitHub)

Search real codebases for production patterns:

# Search GitHub for code patterns via grep.app or GitHub search
# e.g., https://grep.app/search?q=getServerSession%28&filter[lang][0]=TypeScript
# Or use GitHub code search: gh search code "getServerSession(" --language=TypeScript

Best for: How established projects (1000+ stars) handle specific patterns, battle-tested error handling, real-world integration examples.

Search tips:

  • Search for actual code patterns, not keywords
  • Use (?s) prefix for multi-line regex patterns
  • Filter by language and file path for precision
  • Look for repos with 1000+ stars for production quality

Layer 3: Web Search (Current Information)

Search the web for recent articles, discussions, and guides:

# Web search for current information
# e.g., "OWASP JWT security best practices 2024"

Best for: Security advisories, recent breaking changes, community discussions, performance benchmarks, "why does X behave this way" questions.

Search Workflow

  1. Start with official docs — fastest, most authoritative
  2. If docs insufficient — search GitHub for real implementations
  3. If pattern unclear — web search for community knowledge
  4. Synthesize — combine findings into actionable guidance

Result Evaluation

For each source found, assess:

Criterion Check
Recency Is this from the current major version?
Authority Official docs > popular repos > blog posts
Completeness Does it cover error handling and edge cases?
Applicability Does it match our tech stack and constraints?

Output Format

## Research: [Topic]

### Official Documentation
- [Finding 1 with link]
- [Finding 2 with link]

### Production Examples
- [Repo/file]: [What pattern they use and why]
- [Repo/file]: [Alternative approach]

### Recommendation
Based on [sources], the recommended approach is [X] because [reasons].

### Caveats
- [Known limitation or gotcha]

Anti-Patterns

  • Searching for keywords instead of actual code patterns on GitHub
  • Trusting blog posts over official documentation
  • Using examples from outdated library versions
  • Skipping error handling patterns in reference code
  • Over-researching — stop when you have enough to proceed confidently

Example

User: "How should I implement rate limiting in Express?"

Output:

  1. Official docs: express-rate-limit documentation — configuration options, store adapters
  2. GitHub: 3 production repos showing Redis-backed rate limiting with sliding window
  3. Web: OWASP rate limiting guidelines, comparison of token bucket vs sliding window
  4. Recommendation: Use express-rate-limit with Redis store, sliding window algorithm, with specific config example

Inspired by: oh-my-opencode Librarian agent

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GitHub Stars
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First Seen
12 days ago
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