--- sidebar_position: 0 title: "Build Your Kafka Skill" description: "Create your Kafka event schema skill in one prompt, then learn to improve it throughout the chapter" chapter: 52 lesson: 0 duration_minutes: 15 skills: - name: "Skill-First Learning" proficiency_level: "B1" category: "Applied" bloom_level: "Apply" digcomp_area: "3. Digital Content Creation" measurable_at_this_level: "Student creates a working Kafka skill using natural language" learning_objectives: - objective: "Build a Kafka event skill using natural conversation with Claude" proficiency_level: "B1" bloom_level: "Apply" assessment_method: "Student has a working kafka-events skill in .claude/skills/" cognitive_load: new_concepts: 1 assessment: "Single concept: use Claude to build a skill from official docs" differentiation: extension_for_advanced: "Add schema registry and exactly-once patterns during creation" remedial_for_struggling: "Follow exact prompt provided" --- # Build Your Kafka Skill Before learning Kafka—building event-driven architectures for AI agents—you'll **own** a Kafka skill. --- ## Step 1: Get the Skills Lab 1. Go to [github.com/panaversity/claude-code-skills-lab](https://github.com/panaversity/claude-code-skills-lab) 2. Click the green **Code** button 3. Select **Download ZIP** 4. Extract the ZIP file 5. Open the extracted folder in your terminal ```bash cd claude-code-skills-lab claude ``` --- ## Step 2: Create Your Skill Copy and paste this prompt: ``` Using your skill creator skill create a new skill for Apache Kafka. I will use it to build event-driven architectures from hello world to professional production systems. Use context7 skill to study official documentation and then build it so no self assumed knowledge. ``` Claude will: 1. Fetch official Kafka documentation via Context7 2. Ask you clarifying questions (topics, consumer groups, schema patterns) 3. Create the complete skill with references and templates Your skill appears at `.claude/skills/kafka-events/`. --- ## Done You now own a Kafka skill built from official documentation. The rest of this chapter teaches you what it knows—and how to make it better. **Next: Lesson 1 — From Request-Response to Events**