@athenaflow/plugin-matt-pocock-skills 0.1.1
This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
- package/.claude-plugin/plugin.json +24 -0
- package/.codex-plugin/plugin.json +16 -0
- package/NOTICE.md +11 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/.agents/plugins/marketplace.json +14 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/GENERATED.md +12 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/.claude-plugin/plugin.json +24 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/NOTICE.md +11 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/package.json +21 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/diagnose/SKILL.md +117 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/diagnose/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/diagnose/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/diagnose/scripts/hitl-loop.template.sh +41 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-me/SKILL.md +10 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-me/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-me/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/ADR-FORMAT.md +47 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/CONTEXT-FORMAT.md +77 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/SKILL.md +88 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/DEEPENING.md +37 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/INTERFACE-DESIGN.md +44 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/LANGUAGE.md +53 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/SKILL.md +71 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/prototype/LOGIC.md +79 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/prototype/SKILL.md +30 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/prototype/UI.md +112 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/prototype/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/prototype/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/SKILL.md +120 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/agents/claude.yaml +3 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/domain.md +51 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-github.md +22 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-gitlab.md +23 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-local.md +19 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/triage-labels.md +15 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/SKILL.md +109 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/deep-modules.md +33 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/interface-design.md +31 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/mocking.md +59 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/refactoring.md +10 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/tdd/tests.md +61 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/to-issues/SKILL.md +83 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/to-issues/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/to-issues/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/to-prd/SKILL.md +76 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/to-prd/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/to-prd/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/triage/AGENT-BRIEF.md +168 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/triage/OUT-OF-SCOPE.md +101 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/triage/SKILL.md +103 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/triage/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/triage/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/zoom-out/SKILL.md +6 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/zoom-out/agents/claude.yaml +3 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/claude/plugin/skills/zoom-out/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/.codex-plugin/plugin.json +16 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/NOTICE.md +11 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/package.json +21 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/diagnose/SKILL.md +117 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/diagnose/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/diagnose/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/diagnose/scripts/hitl-loop.template.sh +41 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-me/SKILL.md +10 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-me/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-me/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/ADR-FORMAT.md +47 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/CONTEXT-FORMAT.md +77 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/SKILL.md +88 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/grill-with-docs/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/DEEPENING.md +37 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/INTERFACE-DESIGN.md +44 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/LANGUAGE.md +53 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/SKILL.md +71 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/prototype/LOGIC.md +79 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/prototype/SKILL.md +30 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/prototype/UI.md +112 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/prototype/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/prototype/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/SKILL.md +120 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/agents/claude.yaml +3 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/domain.md +51 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-github.md +22 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-gitlab.md +23 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-local.md +19 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/triage-labels.md +15 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/SKILL.md +109 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/deep-modules.md +33 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/interface-design.md +31 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/mocking.md +59 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/refactoring.md +10 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/tdd/tests.md +61 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/to-issues/SKILL.md +83 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/to-issues/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/to-issues/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/to-prd/SKILL.md +76 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/to-prd/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/to-prd/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/triage/AGENT-BRIEF.md +168 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/triage/OUT-OF-SCOPE.md +101 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/triage/SKILL.md +103 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/triage/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/triage/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/zoom-out/SKILL.md +6 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/zoom-out/agents/claude.yaml +3 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/codex/plugin/skills/zoom-out/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/dist/0.1.1/release.json +18 -0
- package/package.json +25 -0
- package/skills/diagnose/SKILL.md +117 -0
- package/skills/diagnose/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/diagnose/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/diagnose/scripts/hitl-loop.template.sh +41 -0
- package/skills/grill-me/SKILL.md +10 -0
- package/skills/grill-me/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/grill-me/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/grill-with-docs/ADR-FORMAT.md +47 -0
- package/skills/grill-with-docs/CONTEXT-FORMAT.md +77 -0
- package/skills/grill-with-docs/SKILL.md +88 -0
- package/skills/grill-with-docs/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/grill-with-docs/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/DEEPENING.md +37 -0
- package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/INTERFACE-DESIGN.md +44 -0
- package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/LANGUAGE.md +53 -0
- package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/SKILL.md +71 -0
- package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/improve-codebase-architecture/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/prototype/LOGIC.md +79 -0
- package/skills/prototype/SKILL.md +30 -0
- package/skills/prototype/UI.md +112 -0
- package/skills/prototype/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/prototype/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/SKILL.md +120 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/agents/claude.yaml +3 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/domain.md +51 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-github.md +22 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-gitlab.md +23 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/issue-tracker-local.md +19 -0
- package/skills/setup-matt-pocock-skills/triage-labels.md +15 -0
- package/skills/tdd/SKILL.md +109 -0
- package/skills/tdd/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/tdd/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/tdd/deep-modules.md +33 -0
- package/skills/tdd/interface-design.md +31 -0
- package/skills/tdd/mocking.md +59 -0
- package/skills/tdd/refactoring.md +10 -0
- package/skills/tdd/tests.md +61 -0
- package/skills/to-issues/SKILL.md +83 -0
- package/skills/to-issues/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/to-issues/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/to-prd/SKILL.md +76 -0
- package/skills/to-prd/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/to-prd/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/triage/AGENT-BRIEF.md +168 -0
- package/skills/triage/OUT-OF-SCOPE.md +101 -0
- package/skills/triage/SKILL.md +103 -0
- package/skills/triage/agents/claude.yaml +2 -0
- package/skills/triage/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
- package/skills/zoom-out/SKILL.md +6 -0
- package/skills/zoom-out/agents/claude.yaml +3 -0
- package/skills/zoom-out/agents/openai.yaml +4 -0
|
@@ -0,0 +1,101 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
# Out-of-Scope Knowledge Base
|
|
2
|
+
|
|
3
|
+
The `.out-of-scope/` directory in a repo stores persistent records of rejected feature requests. It serves two purposes:
|
|
4
|
+
|
|
5
|
+
1. **Institutional memory** — why a feature was rejected, so the reasoning isn't lost when the issue is closed
|
|
6
|
+
2. **Deduplication** — when a new issue comes in that matches a prior rejection, the skill can surface the previous decision instead of re-litigating it
|
|
7
|
+
|
|
8
|
+
## Directory structure
|
|
9
|
+
|
|
10
|
+
```
|
|
11
|
+
.out-of-scope/
|
|
12
|
+
├── dark-mode.md
|
|
13
|
+
├── plugin-system.md
|
|
14
|
+
└── graphql-api.md
|
|
15
|
+
```
|
|
16
|
+
|
|
17
|
+
One file per **concept**, not per issue. Multiple issues requesting the same thing are grouped under one file.
|
|
18
|
+
|
|
19
|
+
## File format
|
|
20
|
+
|
|
21
|
+
The file should be written in a relaxed, readable style — more like a short design document than a database entry. Use paragraphs, code samples, and examples to make the reasoning clear and useful to someone encountering it for the first time.
|
|
22
|
+
|
|
23
|
+
```markdown
|
|
24
|
+
# Dark Mode
|
|
25
|
+
|
|
26
|
+
This project does not support dark mode or user-facing theming.
|
|
27
|
+
|
|
28
|
+
## Why this is out of scope
|
|
29
|
+
|
|
30
|
+
The rendering pipeline assumes a single color palette defined in
|
|
31
|
+
`ThemeConfig`. Supporting multiple themes would require:
|
|
32
|
+
|
|
33
|
+
- A theme context provider wrapping the entire component tree
|
|
34
|
+
- Per-component theme-aware style resolution
|
|
35
|
+
- A persistence layer for user theme preferences
|
|
36
|
+
|
|
37
|
+
This is a significant architectural change that doesn't align with the
|
|
38
|
+
project's focus on content authoring. Theming is a concern for downstream
|
|
39
|
+
consumers who embed or redistribute the output.
|
|
40
|
+
|
|
41
|
+
```ts
|
|
42
|
+
// The current ThemeConfig interface is not designed for runtime switching:
|
|
43
|
+
interface ThemeConfig {
|
|
44
|
+
colors: ColorPalette; // single palette, resolved at build time
|
|
45
|
+
fonts: FontStack;
|
|
46
|
+
}
|
|
47
|
+
```
|
|
48
|
+
|
|
49
|
+
## Prior requests
|
|
50
|
+
|
|
51
|
+
- #42 — "Add dark mode support"
|
|
52
|
+
- #87 — "Night theme for accessibility"
|
|
53
|
+
- #134 — "Dark theme option"
|
|
54
|
+
```
|
|
55
|
+
|
|
56
|
+
### Naming the file
|
|
57
|
+
|
|
58
|
+
Use a short, descriptive kebab-case name for the concept: `dark-mode.md`, `plugin-system.md`, `graphql-api.md`. The name should be recognizable enough that someone browsing the directory understands what was rejected without opening the file.
|
|
59
|
+
|
|
60
|
+
### Writing the reason
|
|
61
|
+
|
|
62
|
+
The reason should be substantive — not "we don't want this" but why. Good reasons reference:
|
|
63
|
+
|
|
64
|
+
- Project scope or philosophy ("This project focuses on X; theming is a downstream concern")
|
|
65
|
+
- Technical constraints ("Supporting this would require Y, which conflicts with our Z architecture")
|
|
66
|
+
- Strategic decisions ("We chose to use A instead of B because...")
|
|
67
|
+
|
|
68
|
+
The reason should be durable. Avoid referencing temporary circumstances ("we're too busy right now") — those aren't real rejections, they're deferrals.
|
|
69
|
+
|
|
70
|
+
## When to check `.out-of-scope/`
|
|
71
|
+
|
|
72
|
+
During triage (Step 1: Gather context), read all files in `.out-of-scope/`. When evaluating a new issue:
|
|
73
|
+
|
|
74
|
+
- Check if the request matches an existing out-of-scope concept
|
|
75
|
+
- Matching is by concept similarity, not keyword — "night theme" matches `dark-mode.md`
|
|
76
|
+
- If there's a match, surface it to the maintainer: "This is similar to `.out-of-scope/dark-mode.md` — we rejected this before because [reason]. Do you still feel the same way?"
|
|
77
|
+
|
|
78
|
+
The maintainer may:
|
|
79
|
+
|
|
80
|
+
- **Confirm** — the new issue gets added to the existing file's "Prior requests" list, then closed
|
|
81
|
+
- **Reconsider** — the out-of-scope file gets deleted or updated, and the issue proceeds through normal triage
|
|
82
|
+
- **Disagree** — the issues are related but distinct, proceed with normal triage
|
|
83
|
+
|
|
84
|
+
## When to write to `.out-of-scope/`
|
|
85
|
+
|
|
86
|
+
Only when an **enhancement** (not a bug) is rejected as `wontfix`. The flow:
|
|
87
|
+
|
|
88
|
+
1. Maintainer decides a feature request is out of scope
|
|
89
|
+
2. Check if a matching `.out-of-scope/` file already exists
|
|
90
|
+
3. If yes: append the new issue to the "Prior requests" list
|
|
91
|
+
4. If no: create a new file with the concept name, decision, reason, and first prior request
|
|
92
|
+
5. Post a comment on the issue explaining the decision and mentioning the `.out-of-scope/` file
|
|
93
|
+
6. Close the issue with the `wontfix` label
|
|
94
|
+
|
|
95
|
+
## Updating or removing out-of-scope files
|
|
96
|
+
|
|
97
|
+
If the maintainer changes their mind about a previously rejected concept:
|
|
98
|
+
|
|
99
|
+
- Delete the `.out-of-scope/` file
|
|
100
|
+
- The skill does not need to reopen old issues — they're historical records
|
|
101
|
+
- The new issue that triggered the reconsideration proceeds through normal triage
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,103 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
---
|
|
2
|
+
name: triage
|
|
3
|
+
description: Triage issues through a state machine driven by triage roles. Use when user wants to create an issue, triage issues, review incoming bugs or feature requests, prepare issues for an AFK agent, or manage issue workflow.
|
|
4
|
+
---
|
|
5
|
+
|
|
6
|
+
# Triage
|
|
7
|
+
|
|
8
|
+
Move issues on the project issue tracker through a small state machine of triage roles.
|
|
9
|
+
|
|
10
|
+
Every comment or issue posted to the issue tracker during triage **must** start with this disclaimer:
|
|
11
|
+
|
|
12
|
+
```
|
|
13
|
+
> *This was generated by AI during triage.*
|
|
14
|
+
```
|
|
15
|
+
|
|
16
|
+
## Reference docs
|
|
17
|
+
|
|
18
|
+
- [AGENT-BRIEF.md](AGENT-BRIEF.md) — how to write durable agent briefs
|
|
19
|
+
- [OUT-OF-SCOPE.md](OUT-OF-SCOPE.md) — how the `.out-of-scope/` knowledge base works
|
|
20
|
+
|
|
21
|
+
## Roles
|
|
22
|
+
|
|
23
|
+
Two **category** roles:
|
|
24
|
+
|
|
25
|
+
- `bug` — something is broken
|
|
26
|
+
- `enhancement` — new feature or improvement
|
|
27
|
+
|
|
28
|
+
Five **state** roles:
|
|
29
|
+
|
|
30
|
+
- `needs-triage` — maintainer needs to evaluate
|
|
31
|
+
- `needs-info` — waiting on reporter for more information
|
|
32
|
+
- `ready-for-agent` — fully specified, ready for an AFK agent
|
|
33
|
+
- `ready-for-human` — needs human implementation
|
|
34
|
+
- `wontfix` — will not be actioned
|
|
35
|
+
|
|
36
|
+
Every triaged issue should carry exactly one category role and one state role. If state roles conflict, flag it and ask the maintainer before doing anything else.
|
|
37
|
+
|
|
38
|
+
These are canonical role names — the actual label strings used in the issue tracker may differ. The mapping should have been provided to you - run `/setup-matt-pocock-skills` if not.
|
|
39
|
+
|
|
40
|
+
State transitions: an unlabeled issue normally goes to `needs-triage` first; from there it moves to `needs-info`, `ready-for-agent`, `ready-for-human`, or `wontfix`. `needs-info` returns to `needs-triage` once the reporter replies. The maintainer can override at any time — flag transitions that look unusual and ask before proceeding.
|
|
41
|
+
|
|
42
|
+
## Invocation
|
|
43
|
+
|
|
44
|
+
The maintainer invokes `/triage` and describes what they want in natural language. Interpret the request and act. Examples:
|
|
45
|
+
|
|
46
|
+
- "Show me anything that needs my attention"
|
|
47
|
+
- "Let's look at #42"
|
|
48
|
+
- "Move #42 to ready-for-agent"
|
|
49
|
+
- "What's ready for agents to pick up?"
|
|
50
|
+
|
|
51
|
+
## Show what needs attention
|
|
52
|
+
|
|
53
|
+
Query the issue tracker and present three buckets, oldest first:
|
|
54
|
+
|
|
55
|
+
1. **Unlabeled** — never triaged.
|
|
56
|
+
2. **`needs-triage`** — evaluation in progress.
|
|
57
|
+
3. **`needs-info` with reporter activity since the last triage notes** — needs re-evaluation.
|
|
58
|
+
|
|
59
|
+
Show counts and a one-line summary per issue. Let the maintainer pick.
|
|
60
|
+
|
|
61
|
+
## Triage a specific issue
|
|
62
|
+
|
|
63
|
+
1. **Gather context.** Read the full issue (body, comments, labels, reporter, dates). Parse any prior triage notes so you don't re-ask resolved questions. Explore the codebase using the project's domain glossary, respecting ADRs in the area. Read `.out-of-scope/*.md` and surface any prior rejection that resembles this issue.
|
|
64
|
+
|
|
65
|
+
2. **Recommend.** Tell the maintainer your category and state recommendation with reasoning, plus a brief codebase summary relevant to the issue. Wait for direction.
|
|
66
|
+
|
|
67
|
+
3. **Reproduce (bugs only).** Before any grilling, attempt reproduction: read the reporter's steps, trace the relevant code, run tests or commands. Report what happened — successful repro with code path, failed repro, or insufficient detail (a strong `needs-info` signal). A confirmed repro makes a much stronger agent brief.
|
|
68
|
+
|
|
69
|
+
4. **Grill (if needed).** If the issue needs fleshing out, run a `/grill-with-docs` session.
|
|
70
|
+
|
|
71
|
+
5. **Apply the outcome:**
|
|
72
|
+
- `ready-for-agent` — post an agent brief comment ([AGENT-BRIEF.md](AGENT-BRIEF.md)).
|
|
73
|
+
- `ready-for-human` — same structure as an agent brief, but note why it can't be delegated (judgment calls, external access, design decisions, manual testing).
|
|
74
|
+
- `needs-info` — post triage notes (template below).
|
|
75
|
+
- `wontfix` (bug) — polite explanation, then close.
|
|
76
|
+
- `wontfix` (enhancement) — write to `.out-of-scope/`, link to it from a comment, then close ([OUT-OF-SCOPE.md](OUT-OF-SCOPE.md)).
|
|
77
|
+
- `needs-triage` — apply the role. Optional comment if there's partial progress.
|
|
78
|
+
|
|
79
|
+
## Quick state override
|
|
80
|
+
|
|
81
|
+
If the maintainer says "move #42 to ready-for-agent", trust them and apply the role directly. Confirm what you're about to do (role changes, comment, close), then act. Skip grilling. If moving to `ready-for-agent` without a grilling session, ask whether they want to write an agent brief.
|
|
82
|
+
|
|
83
|
+
## Needs-info template
|
|
84
|
+
|
|
85
|
+
```markdown
|
|
86
|
+
## Triage Notes
|
|
87
|
+
|
|
88
|
+
**What we've established so far:**
|
|
89
|
+
|
|
90
|
+
- point 1
|
|
91
|
+
- point 2
|
|
92
|
+
|
|
93
|
+
**What we still need from you (@reporter):**
|
|
94
|
+
|
|
95
|
+
- question 1
|
|
96
|
+
- question 2
|
|
97
|
+
```
|
|
98
|
+
|
|
99
|
+
Capture everything resolved during grilling under "established so far" so the work isn't lost. Questions must be specific and actionable, not "please provide more info".
|
|
100
|
+
|
|
101
|
+
## Resuming a previous session
|
|
102
|
+
|
|
103
|
+
If prior triage notes exist on the issue, read them, check whether the reporter has answered any outstanding questions, and present an updated picture before continuing. Don't re-ask resolved questions.
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,6 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
---
|
|
2
|
+
name: zoom-out
|
|
3
|
+
description: Tell the agent to zoom out and give broader context or a higher-level perspective. Use when you're unfamiliar with a section of code or need to understand how it fits into the bigger picture.
|
|
4
|
+
---
|
|
5
|
+
|
|
6
|
+
I don't know this area of code well. Go up a layer of abstraction. Give me a map of all the relevant modules and callers, using the project's domain glossary vocabulary.
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
{
|
|
2
|
+
"name": "matt-pocock-skills",
|
|
3
|
+
"version": "0.1.1",
|
|
4
|
+
"description": "Bundled subset of Matt Pocock's Skills For Real Engineers (https://github.com/mattpocock/skills) \u2014 eleven engineering and productivity skills used by the fullstack-engineering workflow: setup-matt-pocock-skills, triage, grill-with-docs, grill-me, to-prd, to-issues, tdd, diagnose, zoom-out, prototype, improve-codebase-architecture.",
|
|
5
|
+
"author": {
|
|
6
|
+
"name": "Matt Pocock",
|
|
7
|
+
"url": "https://github.com/mattpocock/skills"
|
|
8
|
+
},
|
|
9
|
+
"skills": "./skills/",
|
|
10
|
+
"interface": {
|
|
11
|
+
"displayName": "Matt Pocock's Skills",
|
|
12
|
+
"shortDescription": "Engineering discipline skills bundled from mattpocock/skills",
|
|
13
|
+
"developerName": "Matt Pocock",
|
|
14
|
+
"category": "Engineering"
|
|
15
|
+
}
|
|
16
|
+
}
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
# Notice
|
|
2
|
+
|
|
3
|
+
This plugin bundles a subset of skills authored by **Matt Pocock**, originally published at:
|
|
4
|
+
|
|
5
|
+
https://github.com/mattpocock/skills
|
|
6
|
+
|
|
7
|
+
The eleven skills under `skills/` (`setup-matt-pocock-skills`, `triage`, `grill-with-docs`, `grill-me`, `to-prd`, `to-issues`, `tdd`, `diagnose`, `zoom-out`, `prototype`, `improve-codebase-architecture`) are © Matt Pocock and are redistributed here under the terms of their upstream license. Refer to the upstream repository for the canonical source and license terms.
|
|
8
|
+
|
|
9
|
+
The wrapping Plugin scaffolding (manifests, marketplace registration, this notice) is © Athenaflow and contributed under the same terms as the rest of this marketplace repo.
|
|
10
|
+
|
|
11
|
+
If you intend to modify, redistribute, or publish derivatives of these skills, defer to the upstream license at https://github.com/mattpocock/skills.
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,21 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
{
|
|
2
|
+
"name": "@athenaflow/plugin-matt-pocock-skills",
|
|
3
|
+
"version": "0.1.1",
|
|
4
|
+
"description": "Bundled subset of Matt Pocock's Skills For Real Engineers (https://github.com/mattpocock/skills) used by the fullstack-engineering workflow.",
|
|
5
|
+
"license": "SEE LICENSE IN NOTICE.md",
|
|
6
|
+
"repository": {
|
|
7
|
+
"type": "git",
|
|
8
|
+
"url": "git+https://github.com/lespaceman/athena-workflow-marketplace.git",
|
|
9
|
+
"directory": "plugins/matt-pocock-skills"
|
|
10
|
+
},
|
|
11
|
+
"publishConfig": {
|
|
12
|
+
"access": "public"
|
|
13
|
+
},
|
|
14
|
+
"files": [
|
|
15
|
+
".claude-plugin/",
|
|
16
|
+
".codex-plugin/",
|
|
17
|
+
"skills/",
|
|
18
|
+
"dist/",
|
|
19
|
+
"NOTICE.md"
|
|
20
|
+
]
|
|
21
|
+
}
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,117 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
---
|
|
2
|
+
name: diagnose
|
|
3
|
+
description: Disciplined diagnosis loop for hard bugs and performance regressions. Reproduce → minimise → hypothesise → instrument → fix → regression-test. Use when user says "diagnose this" / "debug this", reports a bug, says something is broken/throwing/failing, or describes a performance regression.
|
|
4
|
+
---
|
|
5
|
+
|
|
6
|
+
# Diagnose
|
|
7
|
+
|
|
8
|
+
A discipline for hard bugs. Skip phases only when explicitly justified.
|
|
9
|
+
|
|
10
|
+
When exploring the codebase, use the project's domain glossary to get a clear mental model of the relevant modules, and check ADRs in the area you're touching.
|
|
11
|
+
|
|
12
|
+
## Phase 1 — Build a feedback loop
|
|
13
|
+
|
|
14
|
+
**This is the skill.** Everything else is mechanical. If you have a fast, deterministic, agent-runnable pass/fail signal for the bug, you will find the cause — bisection, hypothesis-testing, and instrumentation all just consume that signal. If you don't have one, no amount of staring at code will save you.
|
|
15
|
+
|
|
16
|
+
Spend disproportionate effort here. **Be aggressive. Be creative. Refuse to give up.**
|
|
17
|
+
|
|
18
|
+
### Ways to construct one — try them in roughly this order
|
|
19
|
+
|
|
20
|
+
1. **Failing test** at whatever seam reaches the bug — unit, integration, e2e.
|
|
21
|
+
2. **Curl / HTTP script** against a running dev server.
|
|
22
|
+
3. **CLI invocation** with a fixture input, diffing stdout against a known-good snapshot.
|
|
23
|
+
4. **Headless browser script** (Playwright / Puppeteer) — drives the UI, asserts on DOM/console/network.
|
|
24
|
+
5. **Replay a captured trace.** Save a real network request / payload / event log to disk; replay it through the code path in isolation.
|
|
25
|
+
6. **Throwaway harness.** Spin up a minimal subset of the system (one service, mocked deps) that exercises the bug code path with a single function call.
|
|
26
|
+
7. **Property / fuzz loop.** If the bug is "sometimes wrong output", run 1000 random inputs and look for the failure mode.
|
|
27
|
+
8. **Bisection harness.** If the bug appeared between two known states (commit, dataset, version), automate "boot at state X, check, repeat" so you can `git bisect run` it.
|
|
28
|
+
9. **Differential loop.** Run the same input through old-version vs new-version (or two configs) and diff outputs.
|
|
29
|
+
10. **HITL bash script.** Last resort. If a human must click, drive _them_ with `scripts/hitl-loop.template.sh` so the loop is still structured. Captured output feeds back to you.
|
|
30
|
+
|
|
31
|
+
Build the right feedback loop, and the bug is 90% fixed.
|
|
32
|
+
|
|
33
|
+
### Iterate on the loop itself
|
|
34
|
+
|
|
35
|
+
Treat the loop as a product. Once you have _a_ loop, ask:
|
|
36
|
+
|
|
37
|
+
- Can I make it faster? (Cache setup, skip unrelated init, narrow the test scope.)
|
|
38
|
+
- Can I make the signal sharper? (Assert on the specific symptom, not "didn't crash".)
|
|
39
|
+
- Can I make it more deterministic? (Pin time, seed RNG, isolate filesystem, freeze network.)
|
|
40
|
+
|
|
41
|
+
A 30-second flaky loop is barely better than no loop. A 2-second deterministic loop is a debugging superpower.
|
|
42
|
+
|
|
43
|
+
### Non-deterministic bugs
|
|
44
|
+
|
|
45
|
+
The goal is not a clean repro but a **higher reproduction rate**. Loop the trigger 100×, parallelise, add stress, narrow timing windows, inject sleeps. A 50%-flake bug is debuggable; 1% is not — keep raising the rate until it's debuggable.
|
|
46
|
+
|
|
47
|
+
### When you genuinely cannot build a loop
|
|
48
|
+
|
|
49
|
+
Stop and say so explicitly. List what you tried. Ask the user for: (a) access to whatever environment reproduces it, (b) a captured artifact (HAR file, log dump, core dump, screen recording with timestamps), or (c) permission to add temporary production instrumentation. Do **not** proceed to hypothesise without a loop.
|
|
50
|
+
|
|
51
|
+
Do not proceed to Phase 2 until you have a loop you believe in.
|
|
52
|
+
|
|
53
|
+
## Phase 2 — Reproduce
|
|
54
|
+
|
|
55
|
+
Run the loop. Watch the bug appear.
|
|
56
|
+
|
|
57
|
+
Confirm:
|
|
58
|
+
|
|
59
|
+
- [ ] The loop produces the failure mode the **user** described — not a different failure that happens to be nearby. Wrong bug = wrong fix.
|
|
60
|
+
- [ ] The failure is reproducible across multiple runs (or, for non-deterministic bugs, reproducible at a high enough rate to debug against).
|
|
61
|
+
- [ ] You have captured the exact symptom (error message, wrong output, slow timing) so later phases can verify the fix actually addresses it.
|
|
62
|
+
|
|
63
|
+
Do not proceed until you reproduce the bug.
|
|
64
|
+
|
|
65
|
+
## Phase 3 — Hypothesise
|
|
66
|
+
|
|
67
|
+
Generate **3–5 ranked hypotheses** before testing any of them. Single-hypothesis generation anchors on the first plausible idea.
|
|
68
|
+
|
|
69
|
+
Each hypothesis must be **falsifiable**: state the prediction it makes.
|
|
70
|
+
|
|
71
|
+
> Format: "If <X> is the cause, then <changing Y> will make the bug disappear / <changing Z> will make it worse."
|
|
72
|
+
|
|
73
|
+
If you cannot state the prediction, the hypothesis is a vibe — discard or sharpen it.
|
|
74
|
+
|
|
75
|
+
**Show the ranked list to the user before testing.** They often have domain knowledge that re-ranks instantly ("we just deployed a change to #3"), or know hypotheses they've already ruled out. Cheap checkpoint, big time saver. Don't block on it — proceed with your ranking if the user is AFK.
|
|
76
|
+
|
|
77
|
+
## Phase 4 — Instrument
|
|
78
|
+
|
|
79
|
+
Each probe must map to a specific prediction from Phase 3. **Change one variable at a time.**
|
|
80
|
+
|
|
81
|
+
Tool preference:
|
|
82
|
+
|
|
83
|
+
1. **Debugger / REPL inspection** if the env supports it. One breakpoint beats ten logs.
|
|
84
|
+
2. **Targeted logs** at the boundaries that distinguish hypotheses.
|
|
85
|
+
3. Never "log everything and grep".
|
|
86
|
+
|
|
87
|
+
**Tag every debug log** with a unique prefix, e.g. `[DEBUG-a4f2]`. Cleanup at the end becomes a single grep. Untagged logs survive; tagged logs die.
|
|
88
|
+
|
|
89
|
+
**Perf branch.** For performance regressions, logs are usually wrong. Instead: establish a baseline measurement (timing harness, `performance.now()`, profiler, query plan), then bisect. Measure first, fix second.
|
|
90
|
+
|
|
91
|
+
## Phase 5 — Fix + regression test
|
|
92
|
+
|
|
93
|
+
Write the regression test **before the fix** — but only if there is a **correct seam** for it.
|
|
94
|
+
|
|
95
|
+
A correct seam is one where the test exercises the **real bug pattern** as it occurs at the call site. If the only available seam is too shallow (single-caller test when the bug needs multiple callers, unit test that can't replicate the chain that triggered the bug), a regression test there gives false confidence.
|
|
96
|
+
|
|
97
|
+
**If no correct seam exists, that itself is the finding.** Note it. The codebase architecture is preventing the bug from being locked down. Flag this for the next phase.
|
|
98
|
+
|
|
99
|
+
If a correct seam exists:
|
|
100
|
+
|
|
101
|
+
1. Turn the minimised repro into a failing test at that seam.
|
|
102
|
+
2. Watch it fail.
|
|
103
|
+
3. Apply the fix.
|
|
104
|
+
4. Watch it pass.
|
|
105
|
+
5. Re-run the Phase 1 feedback loop against the original (un-minimised) scenario.
|
|
106
|
+
|
|
107
|
+
## Phase 6 — Cleanup + post-mortem
|
|
108
|
+
|
|
109
|
+
Required before declaring done:
|
|
110
|
+
|
|
111
|
+
- [ ] Original repro no longer reproduces (re-run the Phase 1 loop)
|
|
112
|
+
- [ ] Regression test passes (or absence of seam is documented)
|
|
113
|
+
- [ ] All `[DEBUG-...]` instrumentation removed (`grep` the prefix)
|
|
114
|
+
- [ ] Throwaway prototypes deleted (or moved to a clearly-marked debug location)
|
|
115
|
+
- [ ] The hypothesis that turned out correct is stated in the commit / PR message — so the next debugger learns
|
|
116
|
+
|
|
117
|
+
**Then ask: what would have prevented this bug?** If the answer involves architectural change (no good test seam, tangled callers, hidden coupling) hand off to the `/improve-codebase-architecture` skill with the specifics. Make the recommendation **after** the fix is in, not before — you have more information now than when you started.
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,41 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
#!/usr/bin/env bash
|
|
2
|
+
# Human-in-the-loop reproduction loop.
|
|
3
|
+
# Copy this file, edit the steps below, and run it.
|
|
4
|
+
# The agent runs the script; the user follows prompts in their terminal.
|
|
5
|
+
#
|
|
6
|
+
# Usage:
|
|
7
|
+
# bash hitl-loop.template.sh
|
|
8
|
+
#
|
|
9
|
+
# Two helpers:
|
|
10
|
+
# step "<instruction>" → show instruction, wait for Enter
|
|
11
|
+
# capture VAR "<question>" → show question, read response into VAR
|
|
12
|
+
#
|
|
13
|
+
# At the end, captured values are printed as KEY=VALUE for the agent to parse.
|
|
14
|
+
|
|
15
|
+
set -euo pipefail
|
|
16
|
+
|
|
17
|
+
step() {
|
|
18
|
+
printf '\n>>> %s\n' "$1"
|
|
19
|
+
read -r -p " [Enter when done] " _
|
|
20
|
+
}
|
|
21
|
+
|
|
22
|
+
capture() {
|
|
23
|
+
local var="$1" question="$2" answer
|
|
24
|
+
printf '\n>>> %s\n' "$question"
|
|
25
|
+
read -r -p " > " answer
|
|
26
|
+
printf -v "$var" '%s' "$answer"
|
|
27
|
+
}
|
|
28
|
+
|
|
29
|
+
# --- edit below ---------------------------------------------------------
|
|
30
|
+
|
|
31
|
+
step "Open the app at http://localhost:3000 and sign in."
|
|
32
|
+
|
|
33
|
+
capture ERRORED "Click the 'Export' button. Did it throw an error? (y/n)"
|
|
34
|
+
|
|
35
|
+
capture ERROR_MSG "Paste the error message (or 'none'):"
|
|
36
|
+
|
|
37
|
+
# --- edit above ---------------------------------------------------------
|
|
38
|
+
|
|
39
|
+
printf '\n--- Captured ---\n'
|
|
40
|
+
printf 'ERRORED=%s\n' "$ERRORED"
|
|
41
|
+
printf 'ERROR_MSG=%s\n' "$ERROR_MSG"
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
---
|
|
2
|
+
name: grill-me
|
|
3
|
+
description: Interview the user relentlessly about a plan or design until reaching shared understanding, resolving each branch of the decision tree. Use when user wants to stress-test a plan, get grilled on their design, or mentions "grill me".
|
|
4
|
+
---
|
|
5
|
+
|
|
6
|
+
Interview me relentlessly about every aspect of this plan until we reach a shared understanding. Walk down each branch of the design tree, resolving dependencies between decisions one-by-one. For each question, provide your recommended answer.
|
|
7
|
+
|
|
8
|
+
Ask the questions one at a time.
|
|
9
|
+
|
|
10
|
+
If a question can be answered by exploring the codebase, explore the codebase instead.
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
# ADR Format
|
|
2
|
+
|
|
3
|
+
ADRs live in `docs/adr/` and use sequential numbering: `0001-slug.md`, `0002-slug.md`, etc.
|
|
4
|
+
|
|
5
|
+
Create the `docs/adr/` directory lazily — only when the first ADR is needed.
|
|
6
|
+
|
|
7
|
+
## Template
|
|
8
|
+
|
|
9
|
+
```md
|
|
10
|
+
# {Short title of the decision}
|
|
11
|
+
|
|
12
|
+
{1-3 sentences: what's the context, what did we decide, and why.}
|
|
13
|
+
```
|
|
14
|
+
|
|
15
|
+
That's it. An ADR can be a single paragraph. The value is in recording *that* a decision was made and *why* — not in filling out sections.
|
|
16
|
+
|
|
17
|
+
## Optional sections
|
|
18
|
+
|
|
19
|
+
Only include these when they add genuine value. Most ADRs won't need them.
|
|
20
|
+
|
|
21
|
+
- **Status** frontmatter (`proposed | accepted | deprecated | superseded by ADR-NNNN`) — useful when decisions are revisited
|
|
22
|
+
- **Considered Options** — only when the rejected alternatives are worth remembering
|
|
23
|
+
- **Consequences** — only when non-obvious downstream effects need to be called out
|
|
24
|
+
|
|
25
|
+
## Numbering
|
|
26
|
+
|
|
27
|
+
Scan `docs/adr/` for the highest existing number and increment by one.
|
|
28
|
+
|
|
29
|
+
## When to offer an ADR
|
|
30
|
+
|
|
31
|
+
All three of these must be true:
|
|
32
|
+
|
|
33
|
+
1. **Hard to reverse** — the cost of changing your mind later is meaningful
|
|
34
|
+
2. **Surprising without context** — a future reader will look at the code and wonder "why on earth did they do it this way?"
|
|
35
|
+
3. **The result of a real trade-off** — there were genuine alternatives and you picked one for specific reasons
|
|
36
|
+
|
|
37
|
+
If a decision is easy to reverse, skip it — you'll just reverse it. If it's not surprising, nobody will wonder why. If there was no real alternative, there's nothing to record beyond "we did the obvious thing."
|
|
38
|
+
|
|
39
|
+
### What qualifies
|
|
40
|
+
|
|
41
|
+
- **Architectural shape.** "We're using a monorepo." "The write model is event-sourced, the read model is projected into Postgres."
|
|
42
|
+
- **Integration patterns between contexts.** "Ordering and Billing communicate via domain events, not synchronous HTTP."
|
|
43
|
+
- **Technology choices that carry lock-in.** Database, message bus, auth provider, deployment target. Not every library — just the ones that would take a quarter to swap out.
|
|
44
|
+
- **Boundary and scope decisions.** "Customer data is owned by the Customer context; other contexts reference it by ID only." The explicit no-s are as valuable as the yes-s.
|
|
45
|
+
- **Deliberate deviations from the obvious path.** "We're using manual SQL instead of an ORM because X." Anything where a reasonable reader would assume the opposite. These stop the next engineer from "fixing" something that was deliberate.
|
|
46
|
+
- **Constraints not visible in the code.** "We can't use AWS because of compliance requirements." "Response times must be under 200ms because of the partner API contract."
|
|
47
|
+
- **Rejected alternatives when the rejection is non-obvious.** If you considered GraphQL and picked REST for subtle reasons, record it — otherwise someone will suggest GraphQL again in six months.
|
|
@@ -0,0 +1,77 @@
|
|
|
1
|
+
# CONTEXT.md Format
|
|
2
|
+
|
|
3
|
+
## Structure
|
|
4
|
+
|
|
5
|
+
```md
|
|
6
|
+
# {Context Name}
|
|
7
|
+
|
|
8
|
+
{One or two sentence description of what this context is and why it exists.}
|
|
9
|
+
|
|
10
|
+
## Language
|
|
11
|
+
|
|
12
|
+
**Order**:
|
|
13
|
+
{A concise description of the term}
|
|
14
|
+
_Avoid_: Purchase, transaction
|
|
15
|
+
|
|
16
|
+
**Invoice**:
|
|
17
|
+
A request for payment sent to a customer after delivery.
|
|
18
|
+
_Avoid_: Bill, payment request
|
|
19
|
+
|
|
20
|
+
**Customer**:
|
|
21
|
+
A person or organization that places orders.
|
|
22
|
+
_Avoid_: Client, buyer, account
|
|
23
|
+
|
|
24
|
+
## Relationships
|
|
25
|
+
|
|
26
|
+
- An **Order** produces one or more **Invoices**
|
|
27
|
+
- An **Invoice** belongs to exactly one **Customer**
|
|
28
|
+
|
|
29
|
+
## Example dialogue
|
|
30
|
+
|
|
31
|
+
> **Dev:** "When a **Customer** places an **Order**, do we create the **Invoice** immediately?"
|
|
32
|
+
> **Domain expert:** "No — an **Invoice** is only generated once a **Fulfillment** is confirmed."
|
|
33
|
+
|
|
34
|
+
## Flagged ambiguities
|
|
35
|
+
|
|
36
|
+
- "account" was used to mean both **Customer** and **User** — resolved: these are distinct concepts.
|
|
37
|
+
```
|
|
38
|
+
|
|
39
|
+
## Rules
|
|
40
|
+
|
|
41
|
+
- **Be opinionated.** When multiple words exist for the same concept, pick the best one and list the others as aliases to avoid.
|
|
42
|
+
- **Flag conflicts explicitly.** If a term is used ambiguously, call it out in "Flagged ambiguities" with a clear resolution.
|
|
43
|
+
- **Keep definitions tight.** One sentence max. Define what it IS, not what it does.
|
|
44
|
+
- **Show relationships.** Use bold term names and express cardinality where obvious.
|
|
45
|
+
- **Only include terms specific to this project's context.** General programming concepts (timeouts, error types, utility patterns) don't belong even if the project uses them extensively. Before adding a term, ask: is this a concept unique to this context, or a general programming concept? Only the former belongs.
|
|
46
|
+
- **Group terms under subheadings** when natural clusters emerge. If all terms belong to a single cohesive area, a flat list is fine.
|
|
47
|
+
- **Write an example dialogue.** A conversation between a dev and a domain expert that demonstrates how the terms interact naturally and clarifies boundaries between related concepts.
|
|
48
|
+
|
|
49
|
+
## Single vs multi-context repos
|
|
50
|
+
|
|
51
|
+
**Single context (most repos):** One `CONTEXT.md` at the repo root.
|
|
52
|
+
|
|
53
|
+
**Multiple contexts:** A `CONTEXT-MAP.md` at the repo root lists the contexts, where they live, and how they relate to each other:
|
|
54
|
+
|
|
55
|
+
```md
|
|
56
|
+
# Context Map
|
|
57
|
+
|
|
58
|
+
## Contexts
|
|
59
|
+
|
|
60
|
+
- [Ordering](./src/ordering/CONTEXT.md) — receives and tracks customer orders
|
|
61
|
+
- [Billing](./src/billing/CONTEXT.md) — generates invoices and processes payments
|
|
62
|
+
- [Fulfillment](./src/fulfillment/CONTEXT.md) — manages warehouse picking and shipping
|
|
63
|
+
|
|
64
|
+
## Relationships
|
|
65
|
+
|
|
66
|
+
- **Ordering → Fulfillment**: Ordering emits `OrderPlaced` events; Fulfillment consumes them to start picking
|
|
67
|
+
- **Fulfillment → Billing**: Fulfillment emits `ShipmentDispatched` events; Billing consumes them to generate invoices
|
|
68
|
+
- **Ordering ↔ Billing**: Shared types for `CustomerId` and `Money`
|
|
69
|
+
```
|
|
70
|
+
|
|
71
|
+
The skill infers which structure applies:
|
|
72
|
+
|
|
73
|
+
- If `CONTEXT-MAP.md` exists, read it to find contexts
|
|
74
|
+
- If only a root `CONTEXT.md` exists, single context
|
|
75
|
+
- If neither exists, create a root `CONTEXT.md` lazily when the first term is resolved
|
|
76
|
+
|
|
77
|
+
When multiple contexts exist, infer which one the current topic relates to. If unclear, ask.
|