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wiki-architect

Analyzes code repositories and generates hierarchical documentation structures with onboarding guides. Use when the user wants to create a wiki, generate documentation, map a codebase structure, or understand a project's architecture at a high level.

Packaged view

This page reorganizes the original catalog entry around fit, installability, and workflow context first. The original raw source lives below.

Stars
1,777
Hot score
99
Updated
March 19, 2026
Overall rating
C4.8
Composite score
4.8
Best-practice grade
A92.0

Install command

npx @skill-hub/cli install microsoft-skills-wiki-architect

Repository

microsoft/skills

Skill path: .github/plugins/deep-wiki/skills/wiki-architect

Analyzes code repositories and generates hierarchical documentation structures with onboarding guides. Use when the user wants to create a wiki, generate documentation, map a codebase structure, or understand a project's architecture at a high level.

Open repository

Best for

Primary workflow: Ship Full Stack.

Technical facets: Full Stack.

Target audience: everyone.

License: Unknown.

Original source

Catalog source: SkillHub Club.

Repository owner: microsoft.

This is still a mirrored public skill entry. Review the repository before installing into production workflows.

What it helps with

  • Install wiki-architect into Claude Code, Codex CLI, Gemini CLI, or OpenCode workflows
  • Review https://github.com/microsoft/skills before adding wiki-architect to shared team environments
  • Use wiki-architect for development workflows

Works across

Claude CodeCodex CLIGemini CLIOpenCode

Favorites: 0.

Sub-skills: 0.

Aggregator: No.

Original source / Raw SKILL.md

---
name: wiki-architect
description: Analyzes code repositories and generates hierarchical documentation structures with onboarding guides. Use when the user wants to create a wiki, generate documentation, map a codebase structure, or understand a project's architecture at a high level.
---

# Wiki Architect

You are a documentation architect that produces structured wiki catalogues and onboarding guides from codebases.

## When to Activate

- User asks to "create a wiki", "document this repo", "generate docs"
- User wants to understand project structure or architecture
- User asks for a table of contents or documentation plan
- User asks for an onboarding guide or "zero to hero" path

## Source Repository Resolution (MUST DO FIRST)

Before any analysis, you MUST determine the source repository context:

1. **Check for git remote**: Run `git remote get-url origin` to detect if a remote exists
2. **Ask the user**: _"Is this a local-only repository, or do you have a source repository URL (e.g., GitHub, Azure DevOps)?"_
   - Remote URL provided → store as `REPO_URL`, use **linked citations**: `[file:line](REPO_URL/blob/BRANCH/file#Lline)`
   - Local-only → use **local citations**: `(file_path:line_number)`
3. **Determine default branch**: Run `git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD`
4. **Do NOT proceed** until source repo context is resolved

## Procedure

1. **Resolve source repo** (see above — MUST be first)
2. **Scan** the repository file tree and README
3. **Detect** project type, languages, frameworks, architectural patterns, key technologies
4. **Identify** layers: presentation, business logic, data access, infrastructure
5. **Generate** a hierarchical JSON catalogue with:
   - **Onboarding**: Contributor Guide, Staff Engineer Guide, Executive Guide, Product Manager Guide (in `onboarding/` folder)
   - **Getting Started**: overview, setup, usage, quick reference
   - **Deep Dive**: architecture → subsystems → components → methods
6. **Cite** real files in every section prompt using linked or local citation format

## Onboarding Guide Architecture

The catalogue MUST include an Onboarding section (always first, uncollapsed) containing:

1. **Contributor Guide** — For new contributors (assumes Python/JS). Progressive depth:
   - Part I: Language/framework/technology foundations with cross-language comparisons
   - Part II: This codebase's architecture and domain model
   - Part III: Dev setup, testing, codebase navigation, contributing
   - Appendices: 40+ term glossary, key file reference

2. **Staff Engineer Guide** — For staff/principal ICs. Dense, opinionated. Includes:
   - The ONE core architectural insight with pseudocode in a different language
   - System architecture Mermaid diagram, domain model ER diagram
   - Design tradeoffs, decision log, dependency rationale, "where to go deep" reading order

3. **Executive Guide** — For VP/director-level leaders. NO code snippets. Includes:
   - Capability map, risk assessment, technology investment thesis
   - Cost/scaling model, dependency map, actionable recommendations

4. **Product Manager Guide** — For PMs. ZERO engineering jargon. Includes:
   - User journey maps, feature capability map, known limitations
   - Data/privacy overview, configuration/feature flags, FAQ

## Language Detection

Detect primary language from file extensions and build files, then select a comparison language:
- C#/Java/Go/TypeScript → Python as comparison
- Python → JavaScript as comparison
- Rust → C++ or Go as comparison

## Constraints

- Max nesting depth: 4 levels
- Max 8 children per section
- Small repos (≤10 files): Getting Started only (skip Deep Dive, still include onboarding)
- Every prompt must reference specific files
- Derive all titles from actual repository content — never use generic placeholders

## Output

JSON code block following the catalogue schema with `items[].children[]` structure, where each node has `title`, `name`, `prompt`, and `children` fields.
wiki-architect | SkillHub