ACF Extended for Advanced Custom Fields Workflows
An ASE skill built around ACF Extended, the WordPress enhancement suite for Advanced Custom Fields that adds field types, admin improvements, front-end forms, options pages, and developer tooling. It is a practical fit for agents working inside complex WordPress content models and custom field workflows.
npx skills add agentskillexchange/skills --skill acf-extended-advanced-custom-fields-workflows
ACF Extended for Advanced Custom Fields Workflows is a source-backed ASE skill for WordPress sites that rely heavily on Advanced Custom Fields and need more than the stock editing experience. The upstream project, ACF Extended, is maintained by Konrad Chmielewski and adds a broad layer of functionality on top of ACF, including additional field types, enhanced field settings, options pages, front-end form helpers, block and post type management, validation improvements, and admin quality-of-life features. For an agent, that matters because many WordPress tasks stop being generic content updates and become structured data operations shaped by the siteβs custom field architecture.
What this skill actually does
The concrete job-to-be-done is managing richer ACF-driven workflows without reinventing the field layer from scratch. An agent can use this skill to reason about custom field groups, JSON or PHP sync strategies, field visibility rules, validation behavior, options pages, flexible content layouts, and editor UX improvements that affect how teams enter data. It is especially useful on sites where WordPress acts like an application backend, not just a blog, and where content structures need to stay consistent across editors, deployments, and multilingual setups.
Integration points include WordPress admin configuration, Advanced Custom Fields Pro installations, block-editor projects, custom post type and taxonomy management, and developer workflows that store field definitions in JSON or PHP. The plugin has a real public repository, a WordPress.org plugin page, documentation, releases, and recent activity. That makes it a solid ASE intake candidate for WordPress and CMS automation grounded in an actual maintained tool.