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yao-meta-skill/references/comparative-analysis.md
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Comparative Analysis

This reference distills four meta-skill archetypes into one design system.

Shared Logic

All four approaches converge on the same model:

  1. A skill is a folderized capability package, not a prompt snippet.
  2. Frontmatter description is the trigger surface.
  3. Long instructions should be split by progressive disclosure.
  4. Skills are most valuable for repeated, multi-step, tool-using workflows.
  5. Skills become more valuable when they are portable, maintainable, and shareable.

Structure-First Creator

Primary strengths:

  • clear structure and boundary discipline
  • strong context-efficiency mindset
  • good guidance on progressive disclosure
  • pragmatic skeleton for authoring without overbuilding

Primary gaps:

  • lighter on trigger benchmarking than the eval-first archetype
  • lighter on distribution and registry than the factory archetype
  • less opinionated on organizational operations beyond good authoring practice

Use it for:

  • canonical package structure
  • concise writing standard
  • deciding what belongs in SKILL.md vs references/

Eval-First Creator

Primary strengths:

  • eval-first mindset
  • explicit trigger optimization
  • positive and negative prompt testing
  • iterative improvement loop with benchmark thinking

Primary gaps:

  • heavier process cost
  • more suitable for high-value skills than quick one-offs
  • some workflow assumptions are tied to a specific runtime style

Use it for:

  • trigger eval design
  • benchmark loops
  • systematic improvement of important skills

Template-First Scaffold

Primary strengths:

  • fast onboarding
  • clean scaffold
  • easy explanation of required fields
  • good for normalizing team authoring habits

Primary gaps:

  • shallow evaluation model
  • limited operations guidance after scaffolding
  • more a template than a full skill engineering system

Use it for:

  • starter layout
  • contributor onboarding
  • low-friction authoring workflow

Factory-First Builder

Primary strengths:

  • strongest productization instinct
  • cross-platform packaging and export thinking
  • validation, security, staleness, and registry mindset
  • closest to a skill factory instead of a skill template

Primary gaps:

  • heavier system and maintenance cost
  • portability requires adaptation layers in practice
  • may be excessive for small personal skills

Use it for:

  • distribution and registry model
  • packaging lifecycle
  • maintenance and governance thinking

Yao Synthesis

The right synthesis is:

  • structure-first for clarity
  • eval-first for reliability
  • template-first for onboarding
  • factory-first for operations and scale

That combination yields a meta-skill that is:

  • lightweight enough to use often
  • rigorous enough for important skills
  • structured enough for team adoption
  • operational enough for long-term reuse