SkillHub

web-navigator

v1.0.0

[TODO: Complete and informative explanation of what the skill does and when to use it. Include WHEN to use this skill - specific scenarios, file types, or tasks that trigger it.]

Sourced from ClawHub, Authored by Jason German

Installation

Please help me install the skill `web-navigator` from SkillHub official store. npx skills add mematron/web-navigator

Web Navigator

Overview

[TODO: 1-2 sentences explaining what this skill enables]

Structuring This Skill

[TODO: Choose the structure that best fits this skill's purpose. Common patterns:

1. Workflow-Based (best for sequential processes) - Works well when there are clear step-by-step procedures - Example: DOCX skill with "Workflow Decision Tree" -> "Reading" -> "Creating" -> "Editing" - Structure: ## Overview -> ## Workflow Decision Tree -> ## Step 1 -> ## Step 2...

2. Task-Based (best for tool collections) - Works well when the skill offers different operations/capabilities - Example: PDF skill with "Quick Start" -> "Merge PDFs" -> "Split PDFs" -> "Extract Text" - Structure: ## Overview -> ## Quick Start -> ## Task Category 1 -> ## Task Category 2...

3. Reference/Guidelines (best for standards or specifications) - Works well for brand guidelines, coding standards, or requirements - Example: Brand styling with "Brand Guidelines" -> "Colors" -> "Typography" -> "Features" - Structure: ## Overview -> ## Guidelines -> ## Specifications -> ## Usage...

4. Capabilities-Based (best for integrated systems) - Works well when the skill provides multiple interrelated features - Example: Product Management with "Core Capabilities" -> numbered capability list - Structure: ## Overview -> ## Core Capabilities -> ### 1. Feature -> ### 2. Feature...

Patterns can be mixed and matched as needed. Most skills combine patterns (e.g., start with task-based, add workflow for complex operations).

Delete this entire "Structuring This Skill" section when done - it's just guidance.]

[TODO: Replace with the first main section based on chosen structure]

[TODO: Add content here. See examples in existing skills: - Code samples for technical skills - Decision trees for complex workflows - Concrete examples with realistic user requests - References to scripts/templates/references as needed]

Resources (optional)

Create only the resource directories this skill actually needs. Delete this section if no resources are required.

scripts/

Executable code (Python/Bash/etc.) that can be run directly to perform specific operations.

Examples from other skills: - PDF skill: fill_fillable_fields.py, extract_form_field_info.py - utilities for PDF manipulation - DOCX skill: document.py, utilities.py - Python modules for document processing

Appropriate for: Python scripts, shell scripts, or any executable code that performs automation, data processing, or specific operations.

Note: Scripts may be executed without loading into context, but can still be read by Codex for patching or environment adjustments.

references/

Documentation and reference material intended to be loaded into context to inform Codex's process and thinking.

Examples from other skills: - Product management: communication.md, context_building.md - detailed workflow guides - BigQuery: API reference documentation and query examples - Finance: Schema documentation, company policies

Appropriate for: In-depth documentation, API references, database schemas, comprehensive guides, or any detailed information that Codex should reference while working.

assets/

Files not intended to be loaded into context, but rather used within the output Codex produces.

Examples from other skills: - Brand styling: PowerPoint template files (.pptx), logo files - Frontend builder: HTML/React boilerplate project directories - Typography: Font files (.ttf, .woff2)

Appropriate for: Templates, boilerplate code, document templates, images, icons, fonts, or any files meant to be copied or used in the final output.


Not every skill requires all three types of resources.