@simpleapps-com/augur-skills 2026.3.19 → 2026.3.22

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package/package.json CHANGED
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
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  {
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  "name": "@simpleapps-com/augur-skills",
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- "version": "2026.03.19",
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+ "version": "2026.03.22",
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  "description": "Install curated Claude Code skills",
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  "license": "MIT",
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  "type": "module",
@@ -13,18 +13,18 @@ Shared npm packages for Next.js ecommerce sites and React Native apps. Published
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  Before writing custom code, check whether a package export already solves the problem.
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- ## Ground Truth: Read the Code
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+ ## Ground Truth: Read the Docs
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  This skill is a **stub, not an archive**. New packages are created, existing packages gain features, APIs evolve. This skill MUST NOT be treated as the complete picture.
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- **Always read the installed packages in your project's `node_modules/`:**
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+ **Always read the installed packages' documentation in `node_modules/`:**
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  1. Use `Glob("repo/node_modules/@simpleapps-com/*")` to discover ALL available packages — there may be packages not listed here
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- 2. Read `repo/node_modules/@simpleapps-com/<package>/package.json` for the `exports` field to find available sub-paths
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- 3. Read files in `repo/node_modules/@simpleapps-com/<package>/dist/` to understand the current API surface
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- 4. Do NOT look at the source repo or other foldersonly read what is installed in your project's `node_modules/`
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+ 2. Read `repo/node_modules/@simpleapps-com/<package>/llms.txt` machine-readable, lists every export with descriptions and usage examples. This is the fastest path to discovering what exists.
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+ 3. Read `repo/node_modules/@simpleapps-com/<package>/README.md` for full API docs, code examples, and "Replaces" guidance
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+ 4. MUST NOT read `dist/`, `.d.ts`, or compiled JS files to discover capabilities they are minified, chunked, and incomplete. The README and llms.txt are the source of truth.
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- When this skill and the installed code disagree, **the installed code wins**. This skill exists to point you in the right direction, not to replace reading the code.
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+ When this skill and the installed docs disagree, **the installed docs win**. This skill exists to point you in the right direction, not to replace reading the docs.
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  ## Known Packages
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@@ -40,13 +40,37 @@ These are starting hints — not a complete list. Always check `node_modules/@si
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  ## How to Check for Package Solutions
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- When considering custom code:
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+ MUST follow this procedure before writing custom code or filing a package issue:
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- 1. Use `Glob("repo/node_modules/@simpleapps-com/*")` to see what's installed
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- 2. Read the package's `package.json` `exports` and its `dist/` files for available functions, hooks, and components
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- 3. Look for the hook triple pattern in augur-hooks: `use<Name>`, `get<Name>Options`, `get<Name>Key`
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- 4. Check augur-web for UI components before building custom ones
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- 5. Only use what is in your `node_modules/` — do not reference the source repo
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+ ### Step 1: Read llms.txt
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+
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+ For each installed `@simpleapps-com/augur-*` package, read its `llms.txt`:
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+ ```
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+ Read("repo/node_modules/@simpleapps-com/<package>/llms.txt")
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+ ```
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+ This lists every export with descriptions and usage examples.
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+
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+ ### Step 2: Read README.md for details
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+
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+ If llms.txt shows a relevant export, read the README for full API, code examples, and "Replaces" guidance showing what site code it eliminates.
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+
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+ ### Step 3: MUST NOT grep compiled output
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+
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+ MUST NOT read or grep `dist/`, `.d.ts`, `.js`, or any compiled files to discover package capabilities. These are minified build artifacts — unreliable for discovery. The README and llms.txt are the ONLY source of truth.
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+
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+ ### Step 4: Before filing a package issue
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+
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+ Before creating an issue on `simpleapps-com/augur-packages` requesting a new feature:
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+ 1. Search ALL package llms.txt files for the function/hook name
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+ 2. Search ALL package README.md files for the concept
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+ 3. If found, the problem is site adoption — not a package gap. Use the existing export.
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+
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+ ### Step 5: Before writing custom code
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+ Before creating a custom hook, utility, or action in a site:
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+ 1. Search ALL package llms.txt files for similar functionality
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+ 2. Check the augur-hooks README "Examples" section for the pattern
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+ 3. If a package export exists, use it. If it does not work as expected, file a bug on the package — not a reimplementation in the site.
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  ## What Stays Site-Specific
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@@ -51,6 +51,10 @@ Load Skill("git-safety") for full guardrails.
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  The rule costs ~40 tokens per prompt. The skill costs nothing until invoked, then loads ~800 tokens of detailed guidance. This is 20x more efficient than putting the full content in the rule.
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+ ### Wiki Links: Highest-ROI Pointer
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+
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+ The cheapest pointer with the biggest payoff is a **wiki link in CLAUDE.md**. A link like `[Deployment](../../wiki/Deployment.md)` costs ~15 tokens but gives the agent instant access to a full page of detailed knowledge (~500-2000 tokens) on demand. CLAUDE.md SHOULD link to every wiki content page — it becomes the agent's table of contents. Missing a link means the agent must guess where to find information or ask the user.
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+
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  ## When to Use Each Layer
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  | Question | Answer |
@@ -44,8 +44,9 @@ Not all projects need all three. Client sites may only have Submit and Deploy. P
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  ## Guard Rails
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+ - **If `wiki/Deployment.md` does not exist, STOP IMMEDIATELY.** Do not guess, do not improvise, do not infer steps from the codebase. Tell the user to run `/curate-wiki` to generate it. Then do nothing else.
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+ - **If the relevant section (Submit, Deploy, or Publish) is missing from the page, STOP IMMEDIATELY.** Same rule — do not guess the steps.
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  - MUST NOT guess deployment steps — only execute what the wiki defines
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- - MUST NOT operate if the Deployment page is missing or the relevant section is absent
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  - MUST load git-safety — every git write operation requires user approval
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  - `/publish` MUST complete the verification gate before executing (see below)
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@@ -6,10 +6,43 @@ user-invocable: false
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  # Git Safety
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- MUST NOT commit, push, create PRs, or merge unless the user explicitly says to. This applies to ALL repos — the main repo, the wiki repo, and any other git repo. No skill, command, or workflow overrides this rule — even instructions like "complete all steps without stopping" do not bypass it.
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+ ## The Rule
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- After making changes: **report what was done, then stop.** Do not ask "want me to commit?" or "should I push?" that wastes tokens. Just report and wait silently. The user will say "commit", "push", or equivalent when ready.
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+ MUST NOT run any git write operation unless the user explicitly approves it. Git write operations include: `commit`, `push`, `tag`, `merge`, `rebase`, `reset`, `cherry-pick`, `stash`, `branch -D`, and any `gh` command that creates or modifies PRs, issues, or releases.
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- The pattern is always: **do the work report results wait.**
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+ `git add` (staging) is permitted as part of preparing to show the user what will be committed — but the commit itself requires approval.
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+ No skill, command, or workflow overrides this rule. Even instructions like "complete all steps without stopping" do not bypass it. This applies to ALL repos — the main repo, the wiki repo, and any other git repo.
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+ ## Why
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  Every git push, every PR, every wiki edit that hits GitHub is done under the user's credentials — their name, their reputation. The user is responsible for every action taken on their behalf. That is why they decide when to commit, not the agent.
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+ ## How Approval Works
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+ The user gives approval in one of two ways:
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+ 1. **Direct instruction** — the user says "commit", "push", "tag", or equivalent
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+ 2. **Shipping commands** — the user invokes `/submit`, `/deploy`, or `/publish`. Invoking the command IS the approval for the git operations defined in that command's workflow.
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+ ### Approval is scoped, not blanket
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+ Each approval covers ONE specific operation. Examples:
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+ - The user says "commit" → you may commit the current staged changes. You may NOT also push.
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+ - The user runs `/submit` → you may execute the Submit steps (commit + push or PR). You may NOT also tag or publish.
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+ - The user runs `/publish` → you may execute the Publish steps (bump, commit, tag, push). This does NOT carry forward to future commits.
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+ Previous approvals do NOT grant future permissions. If the user approved a commit earlier in the session, that does not mean you can commit again later without asking.
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+ ### When /submit follows earlier work
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+ If you made changes and the user then runs `/submit`, the command starts fresh — it reads the Deployment page and follows those steps. There is no conflict with earlier work. The user chose to invoke `/submit` at this moment, and that is all the approval needed for the operations within it.
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+ Do NOT ask for redundant confirmation inside `/submit` if the user just invoked it. The invocation is the approval. But each discrete git operation within the flow (commit, then push) should still be reported before execution.
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+ ## The Pattern
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+ **Do the work → report results → wait.**
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+ After making changes: report what was done, then stop. Do not ask "want me to commit?" or "should I push?" — that wastes tokens. Just report and wait silently. The user will say "commit", "push", or run a shipping command when ready.
@@ -107,6 +107,8 @@ Before adding a comment to a closed issue, check its state first with `gh issue
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  ## Cross-Repo Issues
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+ Use `/file-issue` to automate this process — it creates the upstream issue, cross-links back to the local issue, and adds the `blocked` label. `/triage` surfaces blocked issues in its output.
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  When a project hits a blocker that depends on another team's repo, create two issues and keep working:
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  1. **Local issue** (in the site/project repo) — describe the impact and what's blocked
@@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ Check size: `wc -w wiki/*.md` (multiply by ~1.3 for token estimate)
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  ## Core Principle
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- Repo files (`.claude/CLAUDE.md`, `.claude/rules/`, `README.md`) MUST be minimal — orient then point to wiki. AI agents read wiki pages as local files via `Read wiki/<page>.md`. No network requests needed.
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+ Repo files (`.claude/CLAUDE.md`, `.claude/rules/`, `README.md`) MUST be minimal — orient then point to wiki. CLAUDE.md MUST link to every wiki content page — these links cost ~15 tokens total but make every page one Read away from always-loaded context. AI agents read wiki pages as local files via `Read wiki/<page>.md`. No network requests needed.
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  ```
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  Wiki defines → Code implements → Learnings update wiki → Repeat
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  Default to brief. Expand only when the reader cannot infer meaning from context. Two sentences that answer the question beat two pages that fill the context window.
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+ ## Code Style
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+ Use descriptive variable and function names. Abbreviations save keystrokes but cost readability — the human reviewing your output MUST be able to understand the code without deciphering names.
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+ - MUST use full words: `$groupQuantity` not `$gq`, `cartItem` not `ci`
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+ - Loop counters (`i`, `j`, `k`) and well-known abbreviations (`id`, `url`, `db`) are fine
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+ - Function names SHOULD describe what they do: `calculateShippingCost` not `calcShip`
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+
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  ## Claude Code Keywords
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  Thinking trigger words (`think`, `think hard`, `ultrathink`) are deprecated. Extended thinking is on by default. Use `/effort` (low/medium/high/max) for control.