GitHub Solution Finder is a development Claude Skill built by Pupundel.
- What it does
- GitHub Solution Finder
- Category
- Development
- Created by
- Pupundel
- Last updated
- —
GitHub Solution Finder
GitHub Solution Finder
Skill instructions
name: github-solution-finder description: Search GitHub for battle-tested open-source libraries and solutions
GitHub Solution Finder
Find battle-tested libraries instead of building from scratch. Use GitHub's search operators — they're far more precise than plain Google.
Search Operators (combine with spaces = AND)
| Operator | Example | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| stars:>N | stars:>1000 | More than N stars |
| stars:N..M | stars:100..500 | Between N and M |
| language:X | language:python | Primary language |
| pushed:>DATE | pushed:>2025-06-01 | Commits after date — the key freshness signal |
| created:>DATE | created:>2024-01-01 | Repo created after date |
| topic:X | topic:cli | Tagged with topic |
| license:X | license:mit | Specific license |
| -X | -language:javascript | Exclude (prefix any qualifier) |
| archived:false | | Exclude archived repos |
| is:public fork:false | | No forks |
| in:name / in:readme | http in:name | Restrict where term matches |
| user:X / org:X | org:google | Scope to owner |
| "exact phrase" | "rate limiter" | Phrase match |
| NOT | redis NOT cache | Exclude keyword (strings only) |
High-Signal Query Templates
# Baseline: established + actively maintained
<problem> language:<lang> stars:>500 pushed:>2025-06-01 archived:false
# Find the dominant library (only a few results = clear winner)
<problem> language:python stars:>5000
# Hidden gems (newer, not yet famous, but active)
<problem> language:go stars:50..500 pushed:>2025-09-01 fork:false
# Curated lists — these exist for almost every topic
awesome <topic> in:name stars:>1000
# CLI tools
<task> topic:cli stars:>200 pushed:>2025-01-01
# Commercial-safe only
<problem> license:mit OR license:apache-2.0 stars:>500
# Boolean grouping
(language:rust OR language:go) <problem> stars:>1000
# Code search (different syntax — searches file contents)
path:**/*.py "from fastapi import" symbol:RateLimiter
Search Aggressively — webSearch Is Your Primary Tool
Use webSearch extensively. Do not rely on a single query or a single source. Every solution search should involve multiple rounds of web searching across different angles — GitHub, package registries, blog posts, Stack Overflow, and comparison articles. Cast a wide net before narrowing down.
GitHub searches
webSearch("site:github.com <problem> <language> stars")
webSearch("site:github.com awesome <topic>")
webSearch("site:github.com/issues <specific error message>")
webSearch("best <language> library for <problem> 2026")
Note: GitHub-specific qualifiers like language:, stars:>, and pushed:> only work on GitHub's own search engine. Through webSearch, use natural-language equivalents (e.g. "python" instead of language:python). For precise filtering, use gh search repos if the GitHub CLI is available (see below).
Package registry searches
webSearch("site:pypi.org <problem>") # Python
webSearch("site:npmjs.com <problem>") # Node
webSearch("site:crates.io <problem>") # Rust
webSearch("site:pkg.go.dev <problem>") # Go
Community and comparison searches
webSearch("<lib A> vs <lib B> <language>")
webSearch("<problem> <language> reddit")
webSearch("<problem> best library site:stackoverflow.com")
webSearch("<problem> comparison benchmark <language>")
webSearch("awesome <topic> list github")
Read what you find
webFetch every promising repo URL to read the README directly. Don't just rely on search result snippets — actually read the README, check the examples, and look at the API surface before recommending anything. For comparison posts and blog articles, webFetch the full content to extract specific benchmarks and tradeoffs.
GitHub CLI (if available)
gh search repos "rate limiter" --language=python --stars=">1000" \
--sort=stars --limit=10 --json=name,stargazersCount,pushedAt,url,description
gh api repos/OWNER/REPO --jq '{stars:.stargazers_count, pushed:.pushed_at, issues:.open_issues_count, license:.license.spdx_id, archived:.archived}'
Health Evaluation — Check These Fast
| Signal | Healthy | Walk away |
|---|---|---|
| Last commit | <3 months | >18 months |
| Stars | >1000 (lib), >100 (niche) | <20 |
| Open/closed issue ratio | <0.3 | >1.0 with no replies |
| Contributors | 5+ | 1 (bus factor) |
| "Used by" (sidebar) | >1000 | 0 |
| Releases | Tagged, semver, changelog | No tags |
| License | MIT, Apache-2.0, BSD | None, GPL/AGPL (if commercial) |
| CI badge | Green | Missing or red |
| archived: true banner | — | Instant no |
Red flags in issues: Search the issue tracker for "memory leak", "abandoned", "unmaintained", "alternative". If maintainer hasn't replied to anything in 6 months, the project is effectively dead regardless of star count.
Download trend check:
- Python:
https://pypistats.org/packages/<name>— declining = dying - npm:
https://npmtrends.com/<pkg1>-vs-<pkg2>— compare candidates head-to-head - Check bundle size:
https://bundlephobia.com/package/<name>(frontend only)
License TL;DR
| License | Commercial OK | Must open-source your code? | |---|---|---| | MIT, BSD, Apache-2.0, ISC | Yes | No | | LGPL | Yes | Only if you modify the lib itself | | GPL | Yes | Yes, if you distribute (viral) | | AGPL | Yes | Yes, even for SaaS (network-viral) | | No LICENSE file | No | default is all rights reserved |
Awesome Lists (curated entry points)
sindresorhus/awesome — the root of all awesome lists. Then: awesome-python, awesome-go, awesome-rust, awesome-react, awesome-selfhosted, awesome-nodejs, free-for-dev, build-your-own-x (learn by reimplementing), public-apis.
Comparison Output Template
## pkg-name [12.4k stars, pushed 2 weeks ago, MIT]
github.com/owner/pkg-name
**Does:** One-line pitch.
**Fit:** Why it matches this specific problem.
**Install:** `pip install pkg-name`
**Pro:** Active, typed, 89% test coverage.
**Con:** Pulls in 23 transitive deps; async-only API.
```python
from pkg import Thing
Thing().do(x) # minimal working example
```
Decision Rules
- Two libs within 2x stars of each other → pick the one pushed more recently
- A lib with 50k stars but last commit 2023 → it's dead, find the fork (check "Forks" tab sorted by stars)
- Lib does 10x more than needed → check if you can vendor the 200 lines you actually need (with attribution)
- Can't find anything with >100 stars → problem may be too niche; search blog posts / Stack Overflow for how others solved it
- Found 3+ viable options → npmtrends/pypistats comparison, then read the top 5 closed issues of each
Output
Always present key findings and recommendations as a plaintext summary in chat, even when also generating files. The user should be able to understand the results without opening any files.
Install
/plugin install github-solution-finder-16@PupundelRequires Claude Code CLI.
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