| ▲ | dnautics 6 hours ago | |
i don't understand this mcp/skill distinction? one of the mcps i use indexes the runtime dependency of code modules so that claude can refactor without just blindly grepping. how would that be a "skill"? just wrap the mcp in a cli? fwiw this may be a skill issue, pun intended, but i can't seem to get claude to trigger skills, whereas it reaches for mcps more... i wonder if im missing something. I'm plenty productive in claude though. | ||
| ▲ | AndyNemmity 6 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
So MCPs are a bunch of, essenntially skill type objects. But it has to tell you about all of them, and information about all of them up front. So a Skill is just a smaller granulatrity level of that concept. It's just one of the individual things an MCP can do. This is about context management at some level. When you need to do a single thing within that full list of potential things, you don't need the instructions about a ton of other unrelated things in the context. So it's just not that deep. It would be having a python script or whatever that the skill calls that returns the runtime dependencies and gives them back to the LLM so they can refactor without blindly greping. Does that make sense? | ||
| ▲ | austinbaggio 6 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
In our experience, a lot of it is feel and dev preference. After talking to quite a few developers, we've found the skill was the easiest to get started with, but we also have a CLI tool and an MCP server too. You can check out the docs if you'd prefer to try those - feedback welcome: https://www.ensue-network.ai/docs#cli-tool | ||