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2025-11-30 08:59:09 +08:00

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name, description
name description
skill-stats Display patterns of which thinking skills have been used in the current conversation

/skill-stats

Analyze and display which thinking skills you've used during the current conversation, revealing your reasoning patterns and approach.

What This Command Does

This command provides visibility into the thinking skills that have been applied during the current session, helping you understand your reasoning process and identify patterns in how you approach problems.

How It Works

When you use /skill-stats, Claude will:

  1. Review the conversation: Examine which thinking skills have been explicitly used during the current session
  2. Identify patterns: Note which skills have been used multiple times, which skills work together, and the sequence of skill application
  3. Categorize usage: Group skills by their categories (exploration, analysis, decision-making, etc.)
  4. Present summary: Show you a clear breakdown of your thinking patterns including:
    • Most frequently used skills
    • Common skill combinations
    • Category distribution
    • Notable sequences or patterns

When to Use This Command

Use /skill-stats when you want to:

  • Understand what thinking approaches you've applied to a problem
  • See patterns in how you're reasoning
  • Identify which skill categories you're leaning on most
  • Learn about your problem-solving approach
  • Reflect on whether your reasoning strategy is working
  • Get visibility into the thinking process for the current session

Example Usage

User: /skill-stats

Claude: Here's an analysis of skills used in this conversation:

**Skills Applied** (7 total):
1. decompose (2 times) - Breaking down complex problems
2. evidence-check (1 time) - Validating claims
3. alternatives (1 time) - Generating options
4. weigh-options (2 times) - Evaluating trade-offs
5. systems-thinking (1 time) - Understanding connections

**Category Distribution**:
- Analysis: 43% (decompose, evidence-check, systems-thinking)
- Decision: 43% (alternatives, weigh-options)
- Exploration: 14% (initial wonder phase)

**Common Patterns**:
- decompose → alternatives → weigh-options (used twice)
- This reflects a systematic approach: understand, generate, decide

**Observations**:
- Heavy emphasis on analytical and decision-making skills
- Strong pattern of moving from decomposition to option generation
- Limited use of creative or metacognitive skills
- Approach is methodical and structured