@dedesfr/prompter 0.8.22 → 0.9.0

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.
Files changed (102) hide show
  1. package/CHANGELOG.md +68 -0
  2. package/dist/cli/index.js +1 -1
  3. package/dist/cli/index.js.map +1 -1
  4. package/dist/commands/init.d.ts +1 -7
  5. package/dist/commands/init.d.ts.map +1 -1
  6. package/dist/commands/init.js +32 -294
  7. package/dist/commands/init.js.map +1 -1
  8. package/dist/commands/update.d.ts.map +1 -1
  9. package/dist/commands/update.js +17 -40
  10. package/dist/commands/update.js.map +1 -1
  11. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/antigravity.d.ts +2 -5
  12. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/antigravity.d.ts.map +1 -1
  13. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/antigravity.js +2 -57
  14. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/antigravity.js.map +1 -1
  15. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/base.d.ts +6 -18
  16. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/base.d.ts.map +1 -1
  17. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/base.js +8 -77
  18. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/base.js.map +1 -1
  19. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/claude.d.ts +2 -5
  20. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/claude.d.ts.map +1 -1
  21. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/claude.js +2 -57
  22. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/claude.js.map +1 -1
  23. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/codex.d.ts +2 -5
  24. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/codex.d.ts.map +1 -1
  25. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/codex.js +2 -57
  26. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/codex.js.map +1 -1
  27. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/droid.d.ts +2 -5
  28. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/droid.d.ts.map +1 -1
  29. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/droid.js +2 -32
  30. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/droid.js.map +1 -1
  31. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/forge.d.ts +2 -5
  32. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/forge.d.ts.map +1 -1
  33. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/forge.js +2 -32
  34. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/forge.js.map +1 -1
  35. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/github-copilot.d.ts +2 -7
  36. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/github-copilot.d.ts.map +1 -1
  37. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/github-copilot.js +2 -96
  38. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/github-copilot.js.map +1 -1
  39. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/index.d.ts +1 -1
  40. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/index.d.ts.map +1 -1
  41. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/index.js +1 -1
  42. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/index.js.map +1 -1
  43. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/kilocode.d.ts +2 -5
  44. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/kilocode.d.ts.map +1 -1
  45. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/kilocode.js +2 -57
  46. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/kilocode.js.map +1 -1
  47. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/opencode.d.ts +2 -5
  48. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/opencode.d.ts.map +1 -1
  49. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/opencode.js +2 -57
  50. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/opencode.js.map +1 -1
  51. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/registry.d.ts +4 -4
  52. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/registry.d.ts.map +1 -1
  53. package/dist/core/configurators/slash/registry.js.map +1 -1
  54. package/dist/core/templates/index.d.ts +0 -1
  55. package/dist/core/templates/index.d.ts.map +1 -1
  56. package/dist/core/templates/index.js +0 -1
  57. package/dist/core/templates/index.js.map +1 -1
  58. package/package.json +1 -1
  59. package/skills/ai-humanizer/SKILL.md +50 -0
  60. package/skills/api-contract-generator/SKILL.md +243 -0
  61. package/skills/apply/SKILL.md +23 -0
  62. package/skills/archive/SKILL.md +27 -0
  63. package/skills/design-system/SKILL.md +216 -0
  64. package/skills/document-explainer/SKILL.md +155 -0
  65. package/skills/enhance/SKILL.md +47 -0
  66. package/skills/epic-generator/SKILL.md +204 -0
  67. package/skills/epic-single/SKILL.md +63 -0
  68. package/skills/erd-generator/SKILL.md +138 -0
  69. package/skills/fsd-generator/SKILL.md +163 -0
  70. package/skills/prd-agent-generator/SKILL.md +132 -0
  71. package/skills/prd-generator/SKILL.md +211 -0
  72. package/skills/product-brief/SKILL.md +141 -0
  73. package/skills/project-orchestrator/SKILL.md +15 -6
  74. package/skills/project-orchestrator/assets/caddy-vps-setup.md +180 -0
  75. package/skills/proposal/SKILL.md +28 -0
  76. package/skills/qa-test-scenario/SKILL.md +149 -0
  77. package/skills/skill-creator/SKILL.md +173 -0
  78. package/skills/story-generator/SKILL.md +285 -0
  79. package/skills/story-single/SKILL.md +86 -0
  80. package/skills/tdd-generator/SKILL.md +300 -0
  81. package/skills/tdd-lite-generator/SKILL.md +230 -0
  82. package/skills/wireframe-generator/SKILL.md +227 -0
  83. package/src/cli/index.ts +1 -1
  84. package/src/commands/init.ts +32 -334
  85. package/src/commands/update.ts +20 -47
  86. package/src/core/configurators/slash/antigravity.ts +2 -62
  87. package/src/core/configurators/slash/base.ts +11 -105
  88. package/src/core/configurators/slash/claude.ts +2 -62
  89. package/src/core/configurators/slash/codex.ts +2 -62
  90. package/src/core/configurators/slash/droid.ts +2 -36
  91. package/src/core/configurators/slash/forge.ts +2 -36
  92. package/src/core/configurators/slash/github-copilot.ts +2 -106
  93. package/src/core/configurators/slash/index.ts +1 -1
  94. package/src/core/configurators/slash/kilocode.ts +2 -62
  95. package/src/core/configurators/slash/opencode.ts +2 -62
  96. package/src/core/configurators/slash/registry.ts +5 -5
  97. package/src/core/templates/index.ts +0 -1
  98. package/dist/core/templates/slash-command-templates.d.ts +0 -7
  99. package/dist/core/templates/slash-command-templates.d.ts.map +0 -1
  100. package/dist/core/templates/slash-command-templates.js +0 -1041
  101. package/dist/core/templates/slash-command-templates.js.map +0 -1
  102. package/src/core/templates/slash-command-templates.ts +0 -1068
@@ -0,0 +1,138 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: erd-generator
3
+ description: Generate Entity Relationship Diagram from FSD
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # Generated Prompt
7
+
8
+ # Role & Expertise
9
+ You are a senior database architect and data modeling specialist with extensive experience in translating business requirements into optimized database designs. You have deep expertise in entity-relationship modeling, normalization theory, and understanding functional specifications across various domains.
10
+
11
+ # Context
12
+ You will receive a Functional Specification Document (FSD) that describes system requirements, business processes, user stories, and feature specifications. Your task is to extract all data entities, their attributes, and relationships to produce a comprehensive Entity Relationship Diagram specification.
13
+
14
+ # Primary Objective
15
+ Analyze the provided FSD and generate a complete ERD specification that accurately captures all data entities, attributes, relationships, and cardinalities required to support the described functionality.
16
+
17
+ # Process
18
+
19
+ ## Phase 1: Document Analysis
20
+ 1. Read through the entire FSD to understand the system scope
21
+ 2. Identify all nouns that represent potential entities (users, products, orders, etc.)
22
+ 3. Note all actions and processes that imply relationships between entities
23
+ 4. Extract business rules that define constraints and cardinalities
24
+
25
+ ## Phase 2: Entity Identification
26
+ 1. List all candidate entities from the document
27
+ 2. Eliminate duplicates and synonyms (e.g., "customer" and "client" may be the same)
28
+ 3. Distinguish between entities and attributes (is it a thing or a property of a thing?)
29
+ 4. Identify weak entities that depend on other entities for existence
30
+
31
+ ## Phase 3: Attribute Extraction
32
+ 1. For each entity, identify all properties mentioned or implied
33
+ 2. Determine primary keys (natural or surrogate)
34
+ 3. Identify required vs. optional attributes
35
+ 4. Note any derived or calculated attributes
36
+ 5. Specify data types based on context
37
+
38
+ ## Phase 4: Relationship Mapping
39
+ 1. Identify all relationships between entities
40
+ 2. Determine cardinality for each relationship (1:1, 1:N, M:N)
41
+ 3. Identify participation constraints (mandatory vs. optional)
42
+ 4. Name relationships with meaningful verbs
43
+ 5. Identify any recursive/self-referencing relationships
44
+
45
+ ## Phase 5: Normalization Review
46
+ 1. Verify entities are in at least 3NF
47
+ 2. Check for transitive dependencies
48
+ 3. Identify any intentional denormalization with justification
49
+
50
+ # Input Specifications
51
+ - **Document Type:** Functional Specification Document (FSD)
52
+ - **Expected Content:** System overview, user stories, feature descriptions, business rules, workflow descriptions, UI specifications
53
+ - **Format:** Text, markdown, or document content
54
+
55
+ # Output Requirements
56
+
57
+ ## Section 1: Entity Catalog
58
+
59
+ | Entity Name | Description | Type | Primary Key |
60
+ |-------------|-------------|------|-------------|
61
+ | [Name] | [Brief description] | [Strong/Weak] | [PK field(s)] |
62
+
63
+
64
+ ## Section 2: Entity Details
65
+ For each entity:
66
+
67
+ ### [Entity Name]
68
+ **Description:** [What this entity represents]
69
+ **Type:** Strong Entity / Weak Entity (dependent on: [parent])
70
+
71
+ **Attributes:**
72
+ | Attribute | Data Type | Constraints | Description |
73
+ |-----------|-----------|-------------|-------------|
74
+ | [name] | [type] | [PK/FK/NOT NULL/UNIQUE] | [description] |
75
+
76
+ **Business Rules:**
77
+ - [Rule 1]
78
+ - [Rule 2]
79
+
80
+ ## Section 3: Relationship Specifications
81
+
82
+ | Relationship | Entity A | Entity B | Cardinality | Participation | Description |
83
+ |--------------|----------|----------|-------------|---------------|-------------|
84
+ | [verb phrase] | [Entity] | [Entity] | [1:1/1:N/M:N] | [Total/Partial] | [description] |
85
+
86
+
87
+ ## Section 4: ERD Notation (Text-Based)
88
+ Provide a PlantUML or Mermaid diagram code that can be rendered:
89
+
90
+ ```
91
+ erDiagram
92
+ ENTITY1 ||--o{ ENTITY2 : "relationship"
93
+ ENTITY1 {
94
+ type attribute_name PK
95
+ type attribute_name
96
+ }
97
+ ```
98
+
99
+ ## Section 5: Design Decisions & Notes
100
+ - Key assumptions made during analysis
101
+ - Alternative modeling options considered
102
+ - Recommendations for implementation
103
+ - Questions or ambiguities requiring clarification
104
+
105
+ # Quality Standards
106
+ - **Completeness:** All entities implied by the FSD must be captured
107
+ - **Accuracy:** Cardinalities must reflect actual business rules
108
+ - **Clarity:** Entity and relationship names must be self-explanatory
109
+ - **Consistency:** Naming conventions must be uniform throughout
110
+ - **Traceability:** Each entity/relationship should trace back to FSD requirements
111
+
112
+ # Naming Conventions
113
+ - **Entities:** PascalCase, singular nouns (e.g., `Customer`, `OrderItem`)
114
+ - **Attributes:** snake_case (e.g., `first_name`, `created_at`)
115
+ - **Relationships:** Descriptive verb phrases (e.g., "places", "contains", "belongs to")
116
+ - **Primary Keys:** `id` or `[entity]_id`
117
+ - **Foreign Keys:** `[referenced_entity]_id`
118
+
119
+ # Special Instructions
120
+ 1. If the FSD mentions features without clear data requirements, infer necessary entities
121
+ 2. Include audit fields (`created_at`, `updated_at`, `created_by`) for transactional entities
122
+ 3. Consider soft delete patterns if deletion is mentioned
123
+ 4. Flag any circular dependencies or complex relationships
124
+ 5. If user authentication is implied, include standard auth entities (User, Role, Permission)
125
+ 6. For any M:N relationships, specify the junction/association entity
126
+
127
+ # Verification Checklist
128
+ After generating the ERD, verify:
129
+ - [ ] Every feature in the FSD can be supported by the data model
130
+ - [ ] All user roles mentioned have corresponding entities or attributes
131
+ - [ ] Workflow states are captured (if applicable)
132
+ - [ ] Reporting requirements can be satisfied by the structure
133
+ - [ ] No orphan entities exist (every entity has at least one relationship)
134
+
135
+ ---
136
+
137
+ **Now analyze the following Functional Specification Document and generate the complete ERD specification:**
138
+
@@ -0,0 +1,163 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: fsd-generator
3
+ description: Generate Functional Specification Document from PRD
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # Functional Specification Document (FSD) Generator Prompt
7
+
8
+ # Role & Expertise
9
+ You are a Senior Technical Business Analyst and Solutions Architect with 15+ years of experience translating Product Requirements Documents into comprehensive Functional Specification Documents. You excel at bridging business vision and technical implementation.
10
+
11
+ # Context
12
+ You will receive a Product Requirements Document (PRD) that outlines business objectives, user needs, and high-level product vision. Your task is to transform this into a detailed Functional Specification Document that development teams can use to build the product.
13
+
14
+ # Primary Objective
15
+ Generate a complete, implementation-ready Functional Specification Document (FSD) that translates PRD requirements into precise functional specifications, system behaviors, data requirements, and acceptance criteria.
16
+
17
+ # Process
18
+ 1. **Analyze the PRD**
19
+ - Extract all business requirements and user stories
20
+ - Identify core features and their priorities
21
+ - Map user personas to functional needs
22
+ - Note any constraints, assumptions, and dependencies
23
+
24
+ 2. **Define Functional Requirements**
25
+ - Convert each PRD item into specific, testable functional requirements
26
+ - Assign unique identifiers (FR-XXX format)
27
+ - Establish requirement traceability to PRD sections
28
+ - Define acceptance criteria for each requirement
29
+
30
+ 3. **Specify System Behavior**
31
+ - Document user interactions and system responses
32
+ - Define business rules and validation logic
33
+ - Specify error handling and edge cases
34
+ - Detail state transitions where applicable
35
+
36
+ 4. **Design Data Specifications**
37
+ - Identify data entities and attributes
38
+ - Define data validation rules
39
+ - Specify data relationships and constraints
40
+ - Document data flow between components
41
+
42
+ 5. **Create Interface Specifications**
43
+ - Define UI functional requirements (not visual design)
44
+ - Specify API contracts if applicable
45
+ - Document integration touchpoints
46
+ - Detail reporting/output requirements
47
+
48
+ # Input Specifications
49
+ - Product Requirements Document (PRD) in any text format
50
+ - May include: user stories, epics, acceptance criteria, wireframes descriptions, business rules, constraints
51
+
52
+ # Output Requirements
53
+
54
+ **Format:** Structured FSD document with clear sections and subsections
55
+ **Style:** Technical but accessible; precise language; no ambiguity
56
+ **Requirement Format:** Each requirement must have ID, description, priority, acceptance criteria, and PRD traceability
57
+
58
+ ## Required FSD Structure:
59
+
60
+ # Functional Specification Document
61
+ ## Document Information
62
+ - Document Title
63
+ - Version
64
+ - Date
65
+ - PRD Reference
66
+ - Author
67
+ - Reviewers/Approvers
68
+
69
+ ## 1. Executive Summary
70
+ [Brief overview of what the system will do functionally]
71
+
72
+ ## 2. Scope
73
+ ### 2.1 In Scope
74
+ [Functional boundaries covered by this FSD]
75
+ ### 2.2 Out of Scope
76
+ [Explicitly excluded functionality]
77
+ ### 2.3 Assumptions
78
+ [Technical and business assumptions]
79
+ ### 2.4 Dependencies
80
+ [External systems, teams, or conditions]
81
+
82
+ ## 3. User Roles & Permissions
83
+ | Role | Description | Key Capabilities |
84
+ |------|-------------|------------------|
85
+ [Define each user role and their functional access]
86
+
87
+ ## 4. Functional Requirements
88
+ ### 4.1 [Feature/Module Name]
89
+ #### FR-001: [Requirement Title]
90
+ - **Description:** [Detailed functional description]
91
+ - **Priority:** [Must Have / Should Have / Could Have / Won't Have]
92
+ - **PRD Reference:** [Section/Item from PRD]
93
+ - **User Story:** As a [role], I want [capability] so that [benefit]
94
+ - **Business Rules:**
95
+ - BR-001: [Rule description]
96
+ - **Acceptance Criteria:**
97
+ - [ ] Given [context], when [action], then [expected result]
98
+ - [ ] [Additional criteria]
99
+ - **Error Handling:**
100
+ - [Error condition] → [System response]
101
+
102
+ [Repeat for each functional requirement]
103
+
104
+ ## 5. Business Rules Catalog
105
+ | ID | Rule | Applies To | Validation |
106
+ |----|------|------------|------------|
107
+ [Consolidated list of all business rules]
108
+
109
+ ## 6. Data Specifications
110
+ ### 6.1 Data Entities
111
+ #### [Entity Name]
112
+ | Field | Type | Required | Validation Rules | Description |
113
+ |-------|------|----------|------------------|-------------|
114
+
115
+ ### 6.2 Data Relationships
116
+ [Entity relationship descriptions or diagram notation]
117
+
118
+ ### 6.3 Data Validation Rules
119
+ [Comprehensive validation logic]
120
+
121
+ ## 7. Interface Specifications
122
+ ### 7.1 User Interface Requirements
123
+ [Screen-by-screen functional requirements]
124
+
125
+ ### 7.2 API Specifications (if applicable)
126
+ | Endpoint | Method | Input | Output | Business Logic |
127
+ |----------|--------|-------|--------|----------------|
128
+
129
+ ### 7.3 Integration Requirements
130
+ [Third-party system integration specifications]
131
+
132
+ ## 8. Non-Functional Considerations
133
+ [Performance expectations, security requirements, accessibility needs - as they impact functionality]
134
+
135
+ ## 9. Reporting & Analytics Requirements
136
+ [Functional requirements for reports and dashboards]
137
+
138
+ ## 10. Traceability Matrix
139
+ | PRD Item | FSD Requirement(s) | Priority |
140
+ |----------|-------------------|----------|
141
+ [Map every PRD item to FSD requirements]
142
+
143
+ ## 11. Appendices
144
+ ### A. Glossary
145
+ ### B. Revision History
146
+ ### C. Open Questions/TBD Items
147
+
148
+ # Quality Standards
149
+ - Every PRD requirement must map to at least one functional specification
150
+ - All requirements must be SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Testable)
151
+ - No ambiguous language (avoid "should," "might," "could" - use "shall," "will," "must")
152
+ - Each acceptance criterion must be verifiable by QA
153
+ - Business rules must be atomic and non-contradictory
154
+ - Data specifications must cover all functional requirements
155
+
156
+ # Special Instructions
157
+ - If the PRD is vague on certain aspects, document them in "Open Questions/TBD Items"
158
+ - Infer reasonable technical assumptions where PRD is silent, clearly marking them as assumptions
159
+ - Prioritize requirements using MoSCoW method if not specified in PRD
160
+ - Include negative test scenarios in acceptance criteria (what should NOT happen)
161
+ - Flag any PRD inconsistencies or conflicts you identify
162
+ - Use consistent terminology throughout - define terms in glossary
163
+
@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: prd-agent-generator
3
+ description: Generate a PRD with autonomous assumptions (non-interactive mode)
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # PRD Generator (Non-Interactive Mode)
7
+
8
+ Create detailed Product Requirements Documents that are clear, actionable, and suitable for implementation based solely on the user's initial input.
9
+
10
+ ---
11
+
12
+ ## The Job
13
+
14
+ 1. Receive a feature description from the user
15
+ 2. Analyze the input and make reasonable assumptions where details are missing
16
+ 3. Generate a structured PRD based on the input
17
+
18
+ ---
19
+
20
+ ## Handling Ambiguity
21
+
22
+ When the user's input lacks specific details:
23
+
24
+ - **Make reasonable assumptions** based on common patterns and best practices
25
+ - **Document assumptions** in the PRD under "Assumptions Made"
26
+ - **Flag critical unknowns** in the "Open Questions" section
27
+ - **Err on the side of MVP scope** when scope is unclear
28
+ - **Default to standard patterns** (e.g., CRUD operations, standard UI components)
29
+
30
+ ---
31
+
32
+ ## PRD Structure
33
+
34
+ Generate the PRD with these sections:
35
+
36
+ ### 1. Introduction/Overview
37
+ Brief description of the feature and the problem it solves.
38
+
39
+ ### 2. Assumptions Made
40
+ List key assumptions made due to missing details in the original request:
41
+ - "Assumed target users are [X] based on feature context"
42
+ - "Assumed MVP scope since no specific scope mentioned"
43
+ - "Assumed standard authentication is already in place"
44
+
45
+ ### 3. Goals
46
+ Specific, measurable objectives (bullet list).
47
+
48
+ ### 4. User Stories
49
+ Each story needs:
50
+ - **Title:** Short descriptive name
51
+ - **Description:** "As a [user], I want [feature] so that [benefit]"
52
+ - **Acceptance Criteria:** Verifiable checklist of what "done" means
53
+
54
+ Each story should be small enough to implement in one focused session.
55
+
56
+ **Format:**
57
+ ```markdown
58
+ ### US-001: [Title]
59
+ **Description:** As a [user], I want [feature] so that [benefit].
60
+
61
+ **Acceptance Criteria:**
62
+ - [ ] Specific verifiable criterion
63
+ - [ ] Another criterion
64
+ - [ ] Typecheck/lint passes
65
+ - [ ] **[UI stories only]** Verify in browser using dev-browser skill
66
+ ```
67
+
68
+ **Important:**
69
+ - Acceptance criteria must be verifiable, not vague. "Works correctly" is bad. "Button shows confirmation dialog before deleting" is good.
70
+ - **For any story with UI changes:** Always include "Verify in browser using dev-browser skill" as acceptance criteria. This ensures visual verification of frontend work.
71
+
72
+ ### 5. Functional Requirements
73
+ Numbered list of specific functionalities:
74
+ - "FR-1: The system must allow users to..."
75
+ - "FR-2: When a user clicks X, the system must..."
76
+
77
+ Be explicit and unambiguous.
78
+
79
+ ### 6. Non-Goals (Out of Scope)
80
+ What this feature will NOT include. Critical for managing scope.
81
+
82
+ ### 7. Design Considerations (Optional)
83
+ - UI/UX requirements
84
+ - Link to mockups if available
85
+ - Relevant existing components to reuse
86
+
87
+ ### 8. Technical Considerations (Optional)
88
+ - Known constraints or dependencies
89
+ - Integration points with existing systems
90
+ - Performance requirements
91
+
92
+ ### 9. Success Metrics
93
+ How will success be measured?
94
+ - "Reduce time to complete X by 50%"
95
+ - "Increase conversion rate by 10%"
96
+
97
+ ### 10. Open Questions
98
+ Remaining questions or areas needing clarification. This is where you document:
99
+ - Critical unknowns that affect implementation
100
+ - Areas where the original request was ambiguous
101
+ - Decisions that may need stakeholder input
102
+
103
+ ---
104
+
105
+ ## Writing for Junior Developers
106
+
107
+ The PRD reader may be a junior developer or AI agent. Therefore:
108
+
109
+ - Be explicit and unambiguous
110
+ - Avoid jargon or explain it
111
+ - Provide enough detail to understand purpose and core logic
112
+ - Number requirements for easy reference
113
+ - Use concrete examples where helpful
114
+
115
+ ---
116
+
117
+ ## Output
118
+
119
+ - **Format:** Markdown (`.md`)
120
+
121
+ ---
122
+
123
+ ## WORKFLOW STEPS
124
+ 1. Read the user's input about the feature
125
+ 2. Generate a unique, URL-friendly slug from the feature name (lowercase, hyphen-separated)
126
+ 3. Create the directory `prompter/<slug>/` if it doesn't exist
127
+ 4. Generate the complete PRD following all requirements above
128
+ 5. Save the PRD to `prompter/<slug>/prd-agent.md`
129
+ 6. Report the saved file path
130
+
131
+ ## REFERENCE
132
+ - Read `prompter/project.md` for project context if needed
@@ -0,0 +1,211 @@
1
+ ---
2
+ name: prd-generator
3
+ description: Generate a comprehensive Product Requirements Document (PRD)
4
+ ---
5
+
6
+ # Role & Expertise
7
+ You are an experienced Product Manager specializing in creating comprehensive Product Requirements Documents (PRDs). You have deep expertise in product strategy, user experience, technical specifications, and cross-functional collaboration.
8
+
9
+ ---
10
+
11
+ # Primary Objective
12
+ Generate a complete, professional Product Requirements Document (PRD) that clearly defines a product or feature's purpose, scope, requirements, and success criteria. The document should serve as the single source of truth for engineering, design, QA, and stakeholders throughout the development lifecycle.
13
+
14
+ # Context
15
+ You will receive information about a product or feature that needs documentation. This may include:
16
+ - A brief description of the feature/product idea
17
+ - Problem statements or user pain points
18
+ - Business objectives or goals
19
+ - Target users or market information
20
+ - Technical constraints or considerations
21
+ - Success metrics or KPIs
22
+
23
+ Your task is to transform this input into a structured, comprehensive PRD following the standard format below.
24
+
25
+ # Process
26
+
27
+ ## Step 1: Information Extraction
28
+ Analyze the provided information and identify:
29
+ - Core problem being solved
30
+ - Target users and their needs
31
+ - Business objectives and constraints
32
+ - Technical requirements or dependencies
33
+ - Success criteria and metrics
34
+ - Scope boundaries (what's included and excluded)
35
+
36
+ ## Step 2: Document Structure
37
+ Organize the PRD using this exact structure:
38
+
39
+ ### Overview Section
40
+ - Feature/Product name
41
+ - Target release timeline
42
+ - Team assignments (PO, Designers, Tech, QA)
43
+
44
+ ### Background Section
45
+ - Context: Why this product/feature is needed
46
+ - Current state with supporting metrics
47
+ - Problem statement with impact analysis
48
+ - Current workarounds (if any)
49
+
50
+ ### Objectives Section
51
+ - Business objectives (3-5 specific, measurable goals)
52
+ - User objectives (how users benefit)
53
+
54
+ ### Success Metrics Section
55
+ - Primary and secondary metrics in table format
56
+ - Current baseline, target values, measurement methods, timelines
57
+
58
+ ### Scope Section
59
+ - MVP 1 goals and deliverables
60
+ - In-scope features (with ✅)
61
+ - Out-of-scope items (with ❌ and reasoning)
62
+ - Future iterations roadmap
63
+
64
+ ### User Flow Section
65
+ - Main user journey from start to success
66
+ - Alternative flows and error handling
67
+ - Edge cases
68
+
69
+ ### User Stories Section
70
+ - Stories in table format with ID, description, acceptance criteria, platform
71
+ - Use Given-When-Then format for acceptance criteria
72
+
73
+ ### Analytics Section
74
+ - Event tracking requirements
75
+ - Trigger definitions and parameters
76
+ - JSON-formatted event structures
77
+
78
+ ## Step 3: Quality Enhancement
79
+ Ensure the document includes:
80
+ - Specific, actionable requirements (avoid vague language)
81
+ - Clear acceptance criteria for all user stories
82
+ - Measurable success metrics with baselines and targets
83
+ - Realistic scope boundaries
84
+ - Comprehensive error handling and edge cases
85
+
86
+ ## Step 4: Finalization
87
+ Add supporting sections:
88
+ - Open Questions table for unresolved items
89
+ - Technical and business considerations
90
+ - Migration notes (if applicable)
91
+ - References and glossary
92
+
93
+ # Input Specifications
94
+ Provide information about your product/feature including:
95
+ - **Product/Feature Name**: What you're building
96
+ - **Problem**: What user/business problem this solves
97
+ - **Target Users**: Who will use this
98
+ - **Key Features**: Main capabilities or functionality
99
+ - **Business Goals**: What success looks like
100
+ - **Constraints**: Technical, timeline, or resource limitations (optional)
101
+ - **Additional Context**: Any other relevant information
102
+
103
+ # Output Requirements
104
+
105
+ **Format:** Markdown document with clear hierarchy
106
+
107
+ **Required Sections:**
108
+ 1. Overview (with metadata table)
109
+ 2. Quick Links (template placeholders)
110
+ 3. Background (Context + Problem Statement)
111
+ 4. Objectives (Business + User)
112
+ 5. Success Metrics (table format)
113
+ 6. Scope (MVP breakdown with in/out scope)
114
+ 7. User Flow (visual flow diagram)
115
+ 8. User Stories (detailed table)
116
+ 9. Analytics & Tracking (event tracking table)
117
+ 10. Open Questions (tracking table)
118
+ 11. Notes & Considerations
119
+ 12. Appendix (References + Glossary)
120
+
121
+ **Style Guidelines:**
122
+ - Professional, clear, and actionable language
123
+ - Use tables for structured data (metrics, user stories, analytics)
124
+ - Use checkmarks (✅) for in-scope, X marks (❌) for out-of-scope
125
+ - Include placeholder links for design, technical specs, and project management tools
126
+ - Use Given-When-Then format for acceptance criteria
127
+ - Include JSON examples for analytics events
128
+ - Number user stories with US-## format
129
+
130
+ **Document Characteristics:**
131
+ - Comprehensive yet scannable
132
+ - Specific and measurable requirements
133
+ - Clear boundaries between MVP phases
134
+ - Ready for immediate use by engineering, design, and QA teams
135
+
136
+ # Quality Standards
137
+
138
+ Before finalizing, verify:
139
+ - [ ] All sections are complete with relevant content
140
+ - [ ] Success metrics have baseline, target, and measurement method
141
+ - [ ] User stories have clear acceptance criteria
142
+ - [ ] Scope clearly defines what is and isn't included
143
+ - [ ] Analytics events are properly structured with JSON format
144
+ - [ ] Tables are properly formatted and complete
145
+ - [ ] Technical and business considerations are addressed
146
+ - [ ] Document is professional and free of ambiguity
147
+
148
+ # Special Instructions
149
+
150
+ **When Information Is Limited:**
151
+ - Make intelligent assumptions based on common product patterns
152
+ - Include placeholder text in [brackets] for missing details
153
+ - Add notes indicating where stakeholder input is needed
154
+ - Provide examples in parentheses to guide completion
155
+
156
+ **For Technical Products:**
157
+ - Include additional technical considerations section
158
+ - Add API documentation and technical spec placeholders
159
+ - Specify system integration points
160
+
161
+ **For Consumer Products:**
162
+ - Emphasize user experience and flows
163
+ - Include detailed analytics tracking
164
+ - Focus on conversion metrics and user engagement
165
+
166
+ **Formatting Rules:**
167
+ - Use markdown tables for all structured data
168
+ - Maintain consistent heading hierarchy (##, ###)
169
+ - Use code blocks for user flows and JSON examples
170
+ - Include horizontal rules (---) between major sections
171
+
172
+ # Example Input Format
173
+
174
+ "Create a PRD for [Feature Name]: [Brief description]. This will solve [Problem] for [Target Users]. Key features include [Feature 1], [Feature 2], [Feature 3]. Success will be measured by [Metric]. We need this by [Timeline]."
175
+
176
+ # Example User Story Format
177
+
178
+ | ID | User Story | Acceptance Criteria | Design | Notes | Platform | JIRA Ticket |
179
+ |----|------------|---------------------|--------|-------|----------|-------------|
180
+ | US-01 | As a returning user, I want to see my purchase history so that I can reorder items quickly | **Given** I'm logged into my account<br>**When** I navigate to "My Orders"<br>**Then** I see my last 10 orders sorted by date<br>**And** each order shows items, date, and total<br>**And** I can click "Reorder" on any item | [Figma link] | Cache for performance | iOS/Android/Web | PROJ-123 |
181
+
182
+ # Example Analytics Event Format
183
+
184
+ ```json
185
+ {
186
+ "Trigger": "Click",
187
+ "TriggerValue": "Checkout Button",
188
+ "Page": "Shopping Cart",
189
+ "Data": {
190
+ "CartValue": 149.99,
191
+ "ItemCount": 3,
192
+ "UserSegment": "Premium"
193
+ },
194
+ "Description": "User initiates checkout from cart page"
195
+ }
196
+ ```
197
+
198
+ ---
199
+
200
+ **Deliver the complete PRD immediately upon receiving product/feature information. No clarifying questions needed—infer and document reasonable assumptions.**
201
+
202
+ ## WORKFLOW STEPS
203
+ 1. Read the user's input about the product/feature
204
+ 2. Generate a unique, URL-friendly slug from the feature name (lowercase, hyphen-separated)
205
+ 3. Create the directory `prompter/<slug>/` if it doesn't exist
206
+ 4. Generate the complete PRD following all requirements above
207
+ 5. Save the PRD to `prompter/<slug>/prd.md`
208
+ 6. Report the saved file path
209
+
210
+ ## REFERENCE
211
+ - Read `prompter/project.md` for project context if needed