launchframe 0.2.3 → 0.2.4

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- ---
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- name: clone-website
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- description: Reverse-engineer and clone one or more websites in one shot — **prioritizes real images/videos** (download to public/) and **motion via Framer Motion** for non-trivial animation. Extracts assets, CSS, and content section-by-section and dispatches parallel builder agents in worktrees. Use this whenever the user wants to clone, replicate, rebuild, reverse-engineer, or copy any website. Also triggers on phrases like "make a copy of this site", "rebuild this page", "pixel-perfect clone", "launch a SaaS based on", "build me a clone of", and Launchframe shorthands **Build it**, **Go**, **Ship it**, **Clone the site** (read `launchframe.config.json` only — no URL in chat). This project was scaffolded by Launchframe — read `launchframe.config.json` for the target URL and the user's SaaS-idea rebranding directive before running. URLs can also be passed inline.
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- argument-hint: "[<url1> <url2> ...] (optional — defaults to launchframe.config.json)"
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- user-invocable: true
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- ---
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- # Clone Website
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- You are about to reverse-engineer and rebuild a website as a pixel-perfect clone, then re-skin the copy/branding for the user's SaaS idea.
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- **Launchframe shorthand:** If the user only says **Build it**, **Go**, **Ship it**, **Clone the site**, or **Run launchframe** with no URL in the message, treat that as an invocation of this skill with empty `$ARGUMENTS` — **`launchframe.config.json` alone** supplies `url` and `idea`. Proceed without asking them to repeat those values unless the file is missing or invalid.
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- ## Step 0: Read `launchframe.config.json`
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- **Before doing anything else**, read `launchframe.config.json` at the project root. This file was written by the `launchframe` CLI when the project was scaffolded and is the authoritative source of:
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- - `url` — the visual source-of-truth you are cloning
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- - `idea` — the user's SaaS idea, which becomes the rebranding directive applied after the pixel-perfect clone
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- If `$ARGUMENTS` is non-empty, treat the arguments as additional URLs (or an override) and merge them with the config — explicit CLI args win on conflict. If `launchframe.config.json` is missing, fall back to `$ARGUMENTS` and ask the user for an idea if one wasn't provided.
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- When multiple URLs are provided, process them independently and in parallel where possible, while keeping each site's extraction artifacts isolated in dedicated folders (for example, `docs/research/<hostname>/`).
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- This is not a two-phase process (inspect then build). You are a **foreman walking the job site** — as you inspect each section of the page, you write a detailed specification to a file, then hand that file to a specialist builder agent with everything they need. Extraction and construction happen in parallel, but extraction is meticulous and produces auditable artifacts.
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- ## Scope Defaults
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- The target is the `url` from `launchframe.config.json` (or any URL provided in `$ARGUMENTS`). Clone exactly what's visible at that URL, then apply the SaaS-idea rebrand. Unless the user specifies otherwise, use these defaults:
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- - **Fidelity level (visuals):** Pixel-perfect — exact match in colors, spacing, typography, animations, responsive behavior
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- - **Copy & branding:** Replaced to match the `idea` from `launchframe.config.json` (product name, headlines, feature copy, CTA labels, testimonials). Visuals stay 1:1; words and brand marks get re-skinned.
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- - **In scope:** Visual layout and styling, component structure and interactions, responsive design, mock data shaped for the SaaS idea
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- - **Out of scope:** Real backend / database, authentication, real-time features, SEO optimization, accessibility audit
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- - **Customization beyond the rebrand:** None during the initial pass — match 1:1 visually, swap copy/brand only
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- If the user provides additional instructions (specific fidelity level, deeper customizations, extra context), honor those over the defaults.
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- ## Pre-Flight
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- 1. **Read `launchframe.config.json`** (see Step 0 above). After a fresh `npx launchframe` scaffold, proceed immediately — only echo `url`/`idea` for confirmation if the config looks wrong or the user asked to verify.
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- 2. **Browser automation is required.** Check for available browser MCP tools (Chrome MCP, Playwright MCP, Browserbase MCP, Puppeteer MCP, etc.). Use whichever is available if multiple exist, prefer Chrome MCP. If none are detected, ask the user which browser tool they have and how to connect it. This skill cannot work without browser automation.
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- 3. Validate the resolved URL(s). Normalize and verify each is accessible via your browser MCP tool. If any are invalid, ask the user to correct `launchframe.config.json` (or pass an override) before proceeding.
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- 4. Verify the base project builds: `npm run build`. The Next.js + shadcn/ui + Tailwind v4 scaffold should already be in place. If not, tell the user to run `npm install` first.
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- 5. Create the output directories if they don't exist: `docs/research/`, `docs/research/components/`, `docs/design-references/`, `scripts/`. Plan `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md` as soon as media is inventoried. For multiple clones, also prepare per-site folders like `docs/research/<hostname>/` and `docs/design-references/<hostname>/`.
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- 6. When working with multiple sites in one command, optionally confirm whether to run them in parallel (recommended, if resources allow) or sequentially to avoid overload.
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- ## Guiding Principles
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- These are the truths that separate a successful clone from a "close enough" mess. Internalize them — they should inform every decision you make.
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- ### 0. Launchframe priorities: media & motion (do not defer)
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- **Raster & video are first-class.** Before you treat the page as “mostly typography,” run a dedicated **media inventory** (see `@docs/research/INSPECTION_GUIDE.md` Priority section): every `<img>`, `<picture>` / `<source>`, `<video>` (+ poster), and non-trivial `background-image`. Download to `public/images/` and `public/videos/` and write `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md` (URL → local path, or `BLOCKED` + reason). Component specs MUST list concrete `public/...` paths; if you use a placeholder, say why in `docs/research/EXTRACTION_LIMITATIONS.md`. Never silently drop a hero layer, reel, or og visual.
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- **Motion defaults to Framer Motion.** This template lists `framer-motion` as a dependency. After foundation tokens, ensure `import { motion } from "framer-motion"` (and related APIs: `useScroll`, `useTransform`, `AnimatePresence`, `LayoutGroup`) for: scroll-triggered reveals, staggered children, layout transitions, and gestures — anything beyond a trivial one-property CSS `transition`. In each spec file, add a **Motion** subsection: trigger, duration, easing, delay/stagger, and **implementation: CSS | framer-motion**. Prefer CSS only when it matches the target exactly without JS.
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- ### 1. Completeness Beats Speed
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- Every builder agent must receive **everything** it needs to do its job perfectly: screenshot, exact CSS values, downloaded assets with local paths, real text content, component structure. If a builder has to guess anything — a color, a font size, a padding value — you have failed at extraction. Take the extra minute to extract one more property rather than shipping an incomplete brief.
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- ### 2. Small Tasks, Perfect Results
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- When an agent gets "build the entire features section," it glosses over details — it approximates spacing, guesses font sizes, and produces something "close enough" but clearly wrong. When it gets a single focused component with exact CSS values, it nails it every time.
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- Look at each section and judge its complexity. A simple banner with a heading and a button? One agent. A complex section with 3 different card variants, each with unique hover states and internal layouts? One agent per card variant plus one for the section wrapper. When in doubt, make it smaller.
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- **Complexity budget rule:** If a builder prompt exceeds ~150 lines of spec content, the section is too complex for one agent. Break it into smaller pieces. This is a mechanical check — don't override it with "but it's all related."
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- ### 3. Real Content, Real Assets
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- Extract the actual text, images, videos, and SVGs from the live site. This is a clone, not a mockup. Use `element.textContent`, download every `<img>` and `<video>`, extract inline `<svg>` elements as React components. The only time you generate content is when something is clearly server-generated and unique per session.
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- **Layered assets matter.** A section that looks like one image is often multiple layers — a background watercolor/gradient, a foreground UI mockup PNG, an overlay icon. Inspect each container's full DOM tree and enumerate ALL `<img>` elements and background images within it, including absolutely-positioned overlays. Missing an overlay image makes the clone look empty even if the background is correct.
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- ### 4. Foundation First
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- Nothing can be built until the foundation exists: global CSS with the target site's design tokens (colors, fonts, spacing), TypeScript types for the content structures, and global assets (fonts, favicons). This is sequential and non-negotiable. Everything after this can be parallel.
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- ### 5. Extract How It Looks AND How It Behaves
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- A website is not a screenshot — it's a living thing. Elements move, change, appear, and disappear in response to scrolling, hovering, clicking, resizing, and time. If you only extract the static CSS of each element, your clone will look right in a screenshot but feel dead when someone actually uses it.
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- For every element, extract its **appearance** (exact computed CSS via `getComputedStyle()`) AND its **behavior** (what changes, what triggers the change, and how the transition happens). Not "it looks like 16px" — extract the actual computed value. Not "the nav changes on scroll" — document the exact trigger (scroll position, IntersectionObserver threshold, viewport intersection), the before and after states (both sets of CSS values), and the transition (duration, easing, CSS transition vs. JS-driven vs. CSS `animation-timeline`).
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- Examples of behaviors to watch for — these are illustrative, not exhaustive. The page may do things not on this list, and you must catch those too:
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- - A navbar that shrinks, changes background, or gains a shadow after scrolling past a threshold
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- - Elements that animate into view when they enter the viewport (fade-up, slide-in, stagger delays)
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- - Sections that snap into place on scroll (`scroll-snap-type`)
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- - Parallax layers that move at different rates than the scroll
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- - Hover states that animate (not just change — the transition duration and easing matter)
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- - Dropdowns, modals, accordions with enter/exit animations
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- - Scroll-driven progress indicators or opacity transitions
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- - Auto-playing carousels or cycling content
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- - Dark-to-light (or any theme) transitions between page sections
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- - **Tabbed/pill content that cycles** — buttons that switch visible card sets with transitions
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- - **Scroll-driven tab/accordion switching** — sidebars where the active item auto-changes as content scrolls past (IntersectionObserver, NOT click handlers)
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- - **Smooth scroll libraries** (Lenis, Locomotive Scroll) — check for `.lenis` class or scroll container wrappers
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- ### 6. Identify the Interaction Model Before Building
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- This is the single most expensive mistake in cloning: building a click-based UI when the original is scroll-driven, or vice versa. Before writing any builder prompt for an interactive section, you must definitively answer: **Is this section driven by clicks, scrolls, hovers, time, or some combination?**
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- How to determine this:
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- 1. **Don't click first.** Scroll through the section slowly and observe if things change on their own as you scroll.
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- 2. If they do, it's scroll-driven. Extract the mechanism: `IntersectionObserver`, `scroll-snap`, `position: sticky`, `animation-timeline`, or JS scroll listeners.
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- 3. If nothing changes on scroll, THEN click/hover to test for click/hover-driven interactivity.
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- 4. Document the interaction model explicitly in the component spec: "INTERACTION MODEL: scroll-driven with IntersectionObserver" or "INTERACTION MODEL: click-to-switch with opacity transition."
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- A section with a sticky sidebar and scrolling content panels is fundamentally different from a tabbed interface where clicking switches content. Getting this wrong means a complete rewrite, not a CSS tweak.
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- ### 7. Extract Every State, Not Just the Default
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- Many components have multiple visual states — a tab bar shows different cards per tab, a header looks different at scroll position 0 vs 100, a card has hover effects. You must extract ALL states, not just whatever is visible on page load.
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- For tabbed/stateful content:
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- - Click each tab/button via browser MCP
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- - Extract the content, images, and card data for EACH state
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- - Record which content belongs to which state
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- - Note the transition animation between states (opacity, slide, fade, etc.)
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- For scroll-dependent elements:
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- - Capture computed styles at scroll position 0 (initial state)
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- - Scroll past the trigger threshold and capture computed styles again (scrolled state)
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- - Diff the two to identify exactly which CSS properties change
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- - Record the transition CSS (duration, easing, properties)
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- - Record the exact trigger threshold (scroll position in px, or viewport intersection ratio)
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- ### 8. Spec Files Are the Source of Truth
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- Every component gets a specification file in `docs/research/components/` BEFORE any builder is dispatched. This file is the contract between your extraction work and the builder agent. The builder receives the spec file contents inline in its prompt — the file also persists as an auditable artifact that the user (or you) can review if something looks wrong.
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- The spec file is not optional. It is not a nice-to-have. If you dispatch a builder without first writing a spec file, you are shipping incomplete instructions based on whatever you can remember from a browser MCP session, and the builder will guess to fill gaps.
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- ### 9. Build Must Always Compile
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- Every builder agent must verify `npx tsc --noEmit` passes before finishing. After merging worktrees, you verify `npm run build` passes. A broken build is never acceptable, even temporarily.
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- ## Phase 1: Reconnaissance
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- Navigate to the target URL with browser MCP.
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- ### Screenshots
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- - Take **full-page screenshots** at desktop (1440px) and mobile (390px) viewports
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- - Save to `docs/design-references/` with descriptive names
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- - These are your master reference — builders will receive section-specific crops/screenshots later
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- ### Global Extraction
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- Extract these from the page before doing anything else:
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- **Fonts** — Inspect `<link>` tags for Google Fonts or self-hosted fonts. Check computed `font-family` on key elements (headings, body, code, labels). Document every family, weight, and style actually used. Configure them in `src/app/layout.tsx` using `next/font/google` or `next/font/local`.
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- **Colors** — Extract the site's color palette from computed styles across the page. Update `src/app/globals.css` with the target's actual colors in the `:root` and `.dark` CSS variable blocks. Map them to shadcn's token names (background, foreground, primary, muted, etc.) where they fit. Add custom properties for colors that don't map to shadcn tokens.
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- **Favicons & Meta** — Download favicons, apple-touch-icons, OG images, webmanifest to `public/seo/`. Update `layout.tsx` metadata.
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- **Global UI patterns** — Identify any site-wide CSS or JS: custom scrollbar hiding, scroll-snap on the page container, global keyframe animations, backdrop filters, gradients used as overlays, **smooth scroll libraries** (Lenis, Locomotive Scroll — check for `.lenis`, `.locomotive-scroll`, or custom scroll container classes). Add these to `globals.css` and note any libraries that need to be installed.
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- ### Mandatory Interaction Sweep
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- This is a dedicated pass AFTER screenshots and BEFORE anything else. Its purpose is to discover every behavior on the page — many of which are invisible in a static screenshot.
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- **Scroll sweep:** Scroll the page slowly from top to bottom via browser MCP. At each section, pause and observe:
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- - Does the header change appearance? Record the scroll position where it triggers.
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- - Do elements animate into view? Record which ones and the animation type.
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- - Does a sidebar or tab indicator auto-switch as you scroll? Record the mechanism.
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- - Are there scroll-snap points? Record which containers.
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- - Is there a smooth scroll library active? Check for non-native scroll behavior.
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- **Click sweep:** Click every element that looks interactive:
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- - Every button, tab, pill, link, card
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- - Record what happens: does content change? Does a modal open? Does a dropdown appear?
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- - For tabs/pills: click EACH ONE and record the content that appears for each state
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- **Hover sweep:** Hover over every element that might have hover states:
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- - Buttons, cards, links, images, nav items
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- - Record what changes: color, scale, shadow, underline, opacity
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- **Responsive sweep:** Test at 3 viewport widths via browser MCP:
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- - Desktop: 1440px
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- - Tablet: 768px
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- - Mobile: 390px
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- - At each width, note which sections change layout (column → stack, sidebar disappears, etc.) and at approximately which breakpoint the change occurs.
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- Save all findings to `docs/research/BEHAVIORS.md`. This is your behavior bible — reference it when writing every component spec.
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- ### Page Topology
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- Map out every distinct section of the page from top to bottom. Give each a working name. Document:
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- - Their visual order
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- - Which are fixed/sticky overlays vs. flow content
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- - The overall page layout (scroll container, column structure, z-index layers)
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- - Dependencies between sections (e.g., a floating nav that overlays everything)
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- - **The interaction model** of each section (static, click-driven, scroll-driven, time-driven)
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- Save this as `docs/research/PAGE_TOPOLOGY.md` — it becomes your assembly blueprint.
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- ## Phase 2: Foundation Build
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- This is sequential. Do it yourself (not delegated to an agent) since it touches many files:
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- 1. **Update fonts** in `layout.tsx` to match the target site's actual fonts
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- 2. **Confirm Framer Motion** — `framer-motion` should already be in `package.json`. If missing, add it (`npm install framer-motion`) so builders can import `motion` without ad-hoc library drift.
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- 3. **Update globals.css** with the target's color tokens, spacing values, keyframe animations, utility classes, and any **global scroll behaviors** (Lenis, smooth scroll CSS, scroll-snap on body)
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- 4. **Media inventory + download (early, high priority)** — run the asset discovery script (below) via browser MCP, write `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md`, then implement **`scripts/download-assets.mjs`** and execute it so **images** land in `public/images/` and **videos** (+ posters) in `public/videos/` (or a clear subdirectory scheme under `public/`). Batch parallel downloads (4 concurrent) with errors logged — do not claim success if URLs failed. This step should complete **before** most section components are built so builders use real paths.
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- 5. **Create TypeScript interfaces** in `src/types/` for the content structures you've observed
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- 6. **Extract SVG icons** — find all inline `<svg>` elements on the page, deduplicate them, and save as named React components in `src/components/icons.tsx`. Name them by visual function (e.g., `SearchIcon`, `ArrowRightIcon`, `LogoIcon`).
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- 7. Verify: `npm run build` passes
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- ### Asset Discovery Script Pattern
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- Use browser MCP to enumerate all assets on the page:
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- ```javascript
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- // Run this via browser MCP to discover all assets
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- JSON.stringify({
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- images: [...document.querySelectorAll('img')].map(img => ({
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- src: img.src || img.currentSrc,
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- alt: img.alt,
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- width: img.naturalWidth,
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- height: img.naturalHeight,
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- // Include parent info to detect layered compositions
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- parentClasses: img.parentElement?.className,
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- siblings: img.parentElement ? [...img.parentElement.querySelectorAll('img')].length : 0,
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- position: getComputedStyle(img).position,
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- zIndex: getComputedStyle(img).zIndex
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- })),
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- videos: [...document.querySelectorAll('video')].map(v => ({
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- src: v.src || v.querySelector('source')?.src,
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- poster: v.poster,
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- autoplay: v.autoplay,
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- loop: v.loop,
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- muted: v.muted
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- })),
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- backgroundImages: [...document.querySelectorAll('*')].filter(el => {
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- const bg = getComputedStyle(el).backgroundImage;
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- return bg && bg !== 'none';
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- }).map(el => ({
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- url: getComputedStyle(el).backgroundImage,
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- element: el.tagName + '.' + el.className?.split(' ')[0]
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- })),
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- svgCount: document.querySelectorAll('svg').length,
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- fonts: [...new Set([...document.querySelectorAll('*')].slice(0, 200).map(el => getComputedStyle(el).fontFamily))],
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- favicons: [...document.querySelectorAll('link[rel*="icon"]')].map(l => ({ href: l.href, sizes: l.sizes?.toString() }))
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- });
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- ```
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- Then write a download script that fetches everything to `public/`. Use batched parallel downloads (4 at a time) with proper error handling.
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- ## Phase 3: Component Specification & Dispatch
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- This is the core loop. For each section in your page topology (top to bottom), you do THREE things: **extract**, **write the spec file**, then **dispatch builders**.
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- ### Step 1: Extract
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- For each section, use browser MCP to extract everything:
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- 1. **Screenshot** the section in isolation (scroll to it, screenshot the viewport). Save to `docs/design-references/`.
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- 2. **Extract CSS** for every element in the section. Use the extraction script below — don't hand-measure individual properties. Run it once per component container and capture the full output:
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- ```javascript
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- // Per-component extraction — run via browser MCP
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- // Replace SELECTOR with the actual CSS selector for the component
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- (function(selector) {
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- const el = document.querySelector(selector);
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- if (!el) return JSON.stringify({ error: 'Element not found: ' + selector });
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- const props = [
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- 'fontSize','fontWeight','fontFamily','lineHeight','letterSpacing','color',
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- 'textTransform','textDecoration','backgroundColor','background',
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- 'padding','paddingTop','paddingRight','paddingBottom','paddingLeft',
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- 'margin','marginTop','marginRight','marginBottom','marginLeft',
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- 'width','height','maxWidth','minWidth','maxHeight','minHeight',
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- 'display','flexDirection','justifyContent','alignItems','gap',
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- 'gridTemplateColumns','gridTemplateRows',
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- 'borderRadius','border','borderTop','borderBottom','borderLeft','borderRight',
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- 'boxShadow','overflow','overflowX','overflowY',
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- 'position','top','right','bottom','left','zIndex',
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- 'opacity','transform','transition','cursor',
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- 'objectFit','objectPosition','mixBlendMode','filter','backdropFilter',
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- 'whiteSpace','textOverflow','WebkitLineClamp'
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- ];
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- function extractStyles(element) {
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- const cs = getComputedStyle(element);
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- const styles = {};
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- props.forEach(p => { const v = cs[p]; if (v && v !== 'none' && v !== 'normal' && v !== 'auto' && v !== '0px' && v !== 'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)') styles[p] = v; });
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- return styles;
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- }
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- function walk(element, depth) {
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- if (depth > 4) return null;
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- const children = [...element.children];
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- return {
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- tag: element.tagName.toLowerCase(),
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- classes: element.className?.toString().split(' ').slice(0, 5).join(' '),
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- text: element.childNodes.length === 1 && element.childNodes[0].nodeType === 3 ? element.textContent.trim().slice(0, 200) : null,
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- styles: extractStyles(element),
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- images: element.tagName === 'IMG' ? { src: element.src, alt: element.alt, naturalWidth: element.naturalWidth, naturalHeight: element.naturalHeight } : null,
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- childCount: children.length,
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- children: children.slice(0, 20).map(c => walk(c, depth + 1)).filter(Boolean)
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- };
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- }
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- return JSON.stringify(walk(el, 0), null, 2);
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- })('SELECTOR');
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- ```
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- 3. **Extract multi-state styles** — for any element with multiple states (scroll-triggered, hover, active tab), capture BOTH states:
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- ```javascript
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- // State A: capture styles at current state (e.g., scroll position 0)
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- // Then trigger the state change (scroll, click, hover via browser MCP)
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- // State B: re-run the extraction script on the same element
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- // The diff between A and B IS the behavior specification
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- ```
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- Record the diff explicitly: "Property X changes from VALUE_A to VALUE_B, triggered by TRIGGER, with transition: TRANSITION_CSS."
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- 4. **Extract real content** — all text, alt attributes, aria labels, placeholder text. Use `element.textContent` for each text node. For tabbed/stateful content, **click each tab and extract content per state**.
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- 5. **Identify assets** this section uses — which downloaded images/videos from `public/`, which icon components from `icons.tsx`. Check for **layered images** (multiple `<img>` or background-images stacked in the same container).
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- 6. **Assess complexity** — how many distinct sub-components does this section contain? A distinct sub-component is an element with its own unique styling, structure, and behavior (e.g., a card, a nav item, a search panel).
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- ### Step 2: Write the Component Spec File
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- For each section (or sub-component, if you're breaking it up), create a spec file in `docs/research/components/`. This is NOT optional — every builder must have a corresponding spec file.
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- **File path:** `docs/research/components/<component-name>.spec.md`
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- **Template:**
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- ```markdown
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- # <ComponentName> Specification
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- ## Overview
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- - **Target file:** `src/components/<ComponentName>.tsx`
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- - **Screenshot:** `docs/design-references/<screenshot-name>.png`
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- - **Interaction model:** <static | click-driven | scroll-driven | time-driven>
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- ## DOM Structure
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- <Describe the element hierarchy — what contains what>
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- ## Computed Styles (exact values from getComputedStyle)
342
-
343
- ### Container
344
- - display: ...
345
- - padding: ...
346
- - maxWidth: ...
347
- - (every relevant property with exact values)
348
-
349
- ### <Child element 1>
350
- - fontSize: ...
351
- - color: ...
352
- - (every relevant property)
353
-
354
- ### <Child element N>
355
- ...
356
-
357
- ## States & Behaviors
358
-
359
- ### <Behavior name, e.g., "Scroll-triggered floating mode">
360
- - **Trigger:** <exact mechanism — scroll position 50px, IntersectionObserver rootMargin "-30% 0px", click on .tab-button, hover>
361
- - **State A (before):** maxWidth: 100vw, boxShadow: none, borderRadius: 0
362
- - **State B (after):** maxWidth: 1200px, boxShadow: 0 4px 20px rgba(0,0,0,0.1), borderRadius: 16px
363
- - **Transition:** transition: all 0.3s ease
364
- - **Implementation approach:** <CSS transition + scroll listener | IntersectionObserver | CSS animation-timeline | **framer-motion** (`motion`, `whileInView`, stagger container) | etc.>
365
-
366
- ### Hover states
367
- - **<Element>:** <property>: <before> → <after>, transition: <value>
368
-
369
- ## Motion (Framer Motion vs CSS)
370
- - **Entrance / scroll reveals:** <e.g. fade+translateY, staggerChildren — specify duration, easing, delay, viewport `once`/`margin`>
371
- - **Library:** <`framer-motion` | CSS-only — justify if CSS-only>
372
- - **Keyframes / springs:** <if any — match target curve>
373
-
374
- ## Per-State Content (if applicable)
375
-
376
- ### State: "Featured"
377
- - Title: "..."
378
- - Subtitle: "..."
379
- - Cards: [{ title, description, image, link }, ...]
380
-
381
- ### State: "Productivity"
382
- - Title: "..."
383
- - Cards: [...]
384
-
385
- ## Assets (images & video — required detail)
386
- - Raster: `public/images/<file>` — dimensions, `object-fit`, lazy if below fold
387
- - Video: `public/videos/<file>` — poster `public/images/...` or `public/videos/...`, autoplay/muted/loop, controls
388
- - Background layers: which div uses `background-image` and resolved URL → local path
389
- - Icons used: <ArrowIcon>, <SearchIcon> from icons.tsx
390
-
391
- ## Text Content (verbatim)
392
- <All text content, copy-pasted from the live site>
393
-
394
- ## Responsive Behavior
395
- - **Desktop (1440px):** <layout description>
396
- - **Tablet (768px):** <what changes — e.g., "maintains 2-column, gap reduces to 16px">
397
- - **Mobile (390px):** <what changes — e.g., "stacks to single column, images full-width">
398
- - **Breakpoint:** layout switches at ~<N>px
399
- ```
400
-
401
- Fill every section. If a section doesn't apply (e.g., no states for a static footer), write "N/A" — but think twice before marking States & Behaviors as N/A. Even a footer might have hover states on links.
402
-
403
- ### Step 3: Dispatch Builders
404
-
405
- Based on complexity, dispatch builder agent(s) in worktree(s):
406
-
407
- **Simple section** (1-2 sub-components): One builder agent gets the entire section.
408
-
409
- **Complex section** (3+ distinct sub-components): Break it up. One agent per sub-component, plus one agent for the section wrapper that imports them. Sub-component builders go first since the wrapper depends on them.
410
-
411
- **What every builder agent receives:**
412
- - The full contents of its component spec file (inline in the prompt — don't say "go read the spec file")
413
- - Path to the section screenshot in `docs/design-references/`
414
- - Which shared components to import (`icons.tsx`, `cn()`, shadcn primitives)
415
- - The target file path (e.g., `src/components/HeroSection.tsx`)
416
- - Instruction to verify with `npx tsc --noEmit` before finishing
417
- - For responsive behavior: the specific breakpoint values and what changes
418
-
419
- **Don't wait.** As soon as you've dispatched the builder(s) for one section, move to extracting the next section. Builders work in parallel in their worktrees while you continue extraction.
420
-
421
- ### Step 4: Merge
422
-
423
- As builder agents complete their work:
424
- - Merge their worktree branches into main
425
- - You have full context on what each agent built, so resolve any conflicts intelligently
426
- - After each merge, verify the build still passes: `npm run build`
427
- - If a merge introduces type errors, fix them immediately
428
-
429
- The extract → spec → dispatch → merge cycle continues until all sections are built.
430
-
431
- ## Phase 4: Page Assembly
432
-
433
- After all sections are built and merged, wire everything together in `src/app/page.tsx`:
434
-
435
- - Import all section components
436
- - Implement the page-level layout from your topology doc (scroll containers, column structures, sticky positioning, z-index layering)
437
- - Connect real content to component props
438
- - Implement page-level behaviors: scroll snap, scroll-driven animations, dark-to-light transitions, intersection observers, smooth scroll (Lenis etc.)
439
- - Verify: `npm run build` passes clean
440
-
441
- ## Phase 4.5: SaaS Rebrand Pass
442
-
443
- The pixel-perfect clone is done — now re-skin it for the SaaS idea from `launchframe.config.json`.
444
-
445
- **Guiding rule:** swap words and brand marks, leave structure untouched. The original site's visual hierarchy was already validated by a real product team. Your job is to put the user's product into that proven shell, not to redesign it.
446
-
447
- For every section, replace:
448
-
449
- 1. **Product name & logo** — wherever the original brand appears, use the SaaS idea's name (derive a short product name from the `idea` string if one isn't supplied — keep it 1–2 words, easy to lockup). Replace the wordmark text in place. For the logo glyph, either reuse the original SVG silhouette with a fresh fill, or use a Lucide icon that matches the SaaS category (e.g., `Brain` for AI, `Workflow` for automation, `Sparkles` for generative tooling). Do NOT keep the original brand's actual logo file.
450
- 2. **Hero headline & sub-headline** — write fresh copy that pitches the SaaS idea, using the original line lengths and tone as constraints. If the original is 6 words, write 6 words. If it's 14, write 14. Match emphasis, line breaks, and any inline highlighted phrase.
451
- 3. **Feature/section copy** — rewrite each feature card, callout, stat, and testimonial to fit the SaaS idea. Preserve the count and shape of items (3 feature cards stay 3 feature cards; a 4-column logo bar stays 4 columns). Generate plausible customer-logo names — never use real company names you haven't been authorized to use.
452
- 4. **CTA labels** — adapt button text to the SaaS idea ("Start free", "Get a demo", "Try it free", etc.). Keep the CTA hierarchy (primary/secondary) identical to the original.
453
- 5. **Mock data** — for product UI mockups embedded in marketing screenshots (e.g., a fake dashboard inside a hero), generate mock data shaped for the SaaS idea: realistic-looking but fictional rows, charts, conversation logs, etc.
454
- 6. **Imagery** — placeholder-swap any photography or product screenshots that depict the original brand. Prefer using:
455
- - A neutral abstract gradient / shape composition you generate with CSS or SVG
456
- - A Lucide icon arrangement
457
- - Placeholder service URLs only if explicitly allowed by the user
458
- Keep dimensions, aspect ratios, drop shadows, and surrounding spacing identical to the original.
459
- 7. **Metadata** — update `<title>`, meta description, OG tags, and favicon manifest in `src/app/layout.tsx` to reflect the new SaaS. Generate a simple favicon (initial letter on a brand-colored square) if no asset is provided.
460
-
461
- What you must NOT change in this pass:
462
- - Spacing, padding, typography scale, color tokens, **animation timing & motion choreography** (including Framer Motion `variants` / `transition` props), responsive breakpoints — those are still 1:1 to the original
463
- - Section order, section count, component structure
464
- - Interaction models (scroll-driven stays scroll-driven, etc.)
465
- - Any computed-style value extracted in Phase 3
466
-
467
- After the rebrand pass, the codebase should look like the original site visually but read like the user's SaaS at a glance. Save a short `docs/research/REBRAND.md` summarizing the product name you chose, the headline rewrites, and any assets you swapped — so the user can audit what's clone-derived vs. authored.
468
-
469
- ## Phase 5: Visual QA Diff
470
-
471
- After assembly, do NOT declare the clone complete. Take side-by-side comparison screenshots:
472
-
473
- 1. Open the original site and your clone side-by-side (or take screenshots at the same viewport widths)
474
- 2. Compare section by section, top to bottom, at desktop (1440px)
475
- 3. Compare again at mobile (390px)
476
- 4. For each discrepancy found:
477
- - Check the component spec file — was the value extracted correctly?
478
- - If the spec was wrong: re-extract from browser MCP, update the spec, fix the component
479
- - If the spec was right but the builder got it wrong: fix the component to match the spec
480
- 5. Test all interactive behaviors: scroll through the page, click every button/tab, hover over interactive elements
481
- 6. Verify smooth scroll feels right, header transitions work, tab switching works, animations play
482
-
483
- Only after this visual QA pass is the clone complete.
484
-
485
- ## Pre-Dispatch Checklist
486
-
487
- Before dispatching ANY builder agent, verify you can check every box. If you can't, go back and extract more.
488
-
489
- - [ ] Spec file written to `docs/research/components/<name>.spec.md` with ALL sections filled
490
- - [ ] Every CSS value in the spec is from `getComputedStyle()`, not estimated
491
- - [ ] Interaction model is identified and documented (static / click / scroll / time)
492
- - [ ] For stateful components: every state's content and styles are captured
493
- - [ ] For scroll-driven components: trigger threshold, before/after styles, and transition are recorded
494
- - [ ] For hover states: before/after values and transition timing are recorded
495
- - [ ] All images in the section are identified (including overlays and layered compositions)
496
- - [ ] Any `<video>` (and poster), Lottie, or canvas-driven hero is identified — not approximated as a static div
497
- - [ ] **Motion** subsection filled: CSS vs **framer-motion**, durations, easings, stagger, scroll triggers
498
- - [ ] Responsive behavior is documented for at least desktop and mobile
499
- - [ ] Text content is verbatim from the site, not paraphrased
500
- - [ ] The builder prompt is under ~150 lines of spec; if over, the section needs to be split
501
-
502
- ## What NOT to Do
503
-
504
- These are lessons from previous failed clones — each one cost hours of rework:
505
-
506
- - **Don't build click-based tabs when the original is scroll-driven (or vice versa).** Determine the interaction model FIRST by scrolling before clicking. This is the #1 most expensive mistake — it requires a complete rewrite, not a CSS fix.
507
- - **Don't extract only the default state.** If there are tabs showing "Featured" on load, click Productivity, Creative, Lifestyle and extract each one's cards/content. If the header changes on scroll, capture styles at position 0 AND position 100+.
508
- - **Don't miss overlay/layered images.** A background watercolor + foreground UI mockup = 2 images. Check every container's DOM tree for multiple `<img>` elements and positioned overlays.
509
- - **Don't build mockup components for content that's actually videos/animations.** Check if a section uses `<video>`, Lottie, or canvas before building elaborate HTML mockups of what the video shows.
510
- - **Don't approximate CSS classes.** "It looks like `text-lg`" is wrong if the computed value is `18px` and `text-lg` is `18px/28px` but the actual line-height is `24px`. Extract exact values.
511
- - **Don't build everything in one monolithic commit.** The whole point of this pipeline is incremental progress with verified builds at each step.
512
- - **Don't reference docs from builder prompts.** Each builder gets the CSS spec inline in its prompt — never "see DESIGN_TOKENS.md for colors." The builder should have zero need to read external docs.
513
- - **Don't skip asset extraction.** Without real images, videos, and fonts, the clone will always look fake regardless of how perfect the CSS is.
514
- - **Don't defer image/video download to the end.** Run `MEDIA_MANIFEST.md` + `download-assets.mjs` during foundation so components reference real `public/` paths from the first build.
515
- - **Don't fake complex motion with a single CSS `transition` when the target uses staggered, scroll-scrubbed, or layout-driven animation** — use **`framer-motion`** (`motion`, `whileInView`, `variants`, `staggerChildren`) and match duration/easing from extraction.
516
- - **Don't give a builder agent too much scope.** If you're writing a builder prompt and it's getting long because the section is complex, that's a signal to break it into smaller tasks.
517
- - **Don't bundle unrelated sections into one agent.** A CTA section and a footer are different components with different designs — don't hand them both to one agent and hope for the best.
518
- - **Don't skip responsive extraction.** If you only inspect at desktop width, the clone will break at tablet and mobile. Test at 1440, 768, and 390 during extraction.
519
- - **Don't forget smooth scroll libraries.** Check for Lenis (`.lenis` class), Locomotive Scroll, or similar. Default browser scrolling feels noticeably different and the user will spot it immediately.
520
- - **Don't dispatch builders without a spec file.** The spec file forces exhaustive extraction and creates an auditable artifact. Skipping it means the builder gets whatever you can fit in a prompt from memory.
521
-
522
- ## Completion
523
-
524
- When done, report:
525
- - Source URL cloned (from `launchframe.config.json` or `$ARGUMENTS`)
526
- - SaaS idea applied (from `launchframe.config.json`) and the product name you chose
527
- - Total sections built
528
- - Total components created
529
- - Total spec files written (should match components)
530
- - Total assets downloaded (images, videos, SVGs, fonts) — path to `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md`
531
- - Rebrand summary (path to `docs/research/REBRAND.md`)
532
- - Build status (`npm run build` result)
533
- - Visual QA results (any remaining discrepancies)
534
- - Any known gaps or limitations
1
+ ---
2
+ name: clone-website
3
+ description: Reverse-engineer and clone one or more websites in one shot — **prioritizes real images/videos** (download to public/) and **motion via Framer Motion** for non-trivial animation. Extracts assets, CSS, and content section-by-section and dispatches parallel builder agents in worktrees. Use this whenever the user wants to clone, replicate, rebuild, reverse-engineer, or copy any website. Also triggers on phrases like "make a copy of this site", "rebuild this page", "pixel-perfect clone", "launch a SaaS based on", "build me a clone of", and Launchframe shorthands **Build it**, **Go**, **Ship it**, **Clone the site** (read `launchframe.config.json` only — no URL in chat). This project was scaffolded by Launchframe — read `launchframe.config.json` for the target URL and the user's SaaS-idea rebranding directive before running. URLs can also be passed inline.
4
+ argument-hint: "[<url1> <url2> ...] (optional — defaults to launchframe.config.json)"
5
+ user-invocable: true
6
+ ---
7
+
8
+ # Clone Website
9
+
10
+ You are about to reverse-engineer and rebuild a website as a pixel-perfect clone, then re-skin the copy/branding for the user's SaaS idea.
11
+
12
+ **Launchframe shorthand:** If the user only says **Build it**, **Go**, **Ship it**, **Clone the site**, or **Run launchframe** with no URL in the message, treat that as an invocation of this skill with empty `$ARGUMENTS` — **`launchframe.config.json` alone** supplies `url` and `idea`. Proceed without asking them to repeat those values unless the file is missing or invalid.
13
+
14
+ ## Step 0: Read `launchframe.config.json`
15
+
16
+ **Before doing anything else**, read `launchframe.config.json` at the project root. This file was written by the `launchframe` CLI when the project was scaffolded and is the authoritative source of:
17
+
18
+ - `url` — the visual source-of-truth you are cloning
19
+ - `idea` — the user's SaaS idea, which becomes the rebranding directive applied after the pixel-perfect clone
20
+
21
+ If `$ARGUMENTS` is non-empty, treat the arguments as additional URLs (or an override) and merge them with the config — explicit CLI args win on conflict. If `launchframe.config.json` is missing, fall back to `$ARGUMENTS` and ask the user for an idea if one wasn't provided.
22
+
23
+ When multiple URLs are provided, process them independently and in parallel where possible, while keeping each site's extraction artifacts isolated in dedicated folders (for example, `docs/research/<hostname>/`).
24
+
25
+ This is not a two-phase process (inspect then build). You are a **foreman walking the job site** — as you inspect each section of the page, you write a detailed specification to a file, then hand that file to a specialist builder agent with everything they need. Extraction and construction happen in parallel, but extraction is meticulous and produces auditable artifacts.
26
+
27
+ ## Scope Defaults
28
+
29
+ The target is the `url` from `launchframe.config.json` (or any URL provided in `$ARGUMENTS`). Clone exactly what's visible at that URL, then apply the SaaS-idea rebrand. Unless the user specifies otherwise, use these defaults:
30
+
31
+ - **Fidelity level (visuals):** Pixel-perfect — exact match in colors, spacing, typography, animations, responsive behavior
32
+ - **Copy & branding:** Replaced to match the `idea` from `launchframe.config.json` (product name, headlines, feature copy, CTA labels, testimonials). Visuals stay 1:1; words and brand marks get re-skinned.
33
+ - **In scope:** Visual layout and styling, component structure and interactions, responsive design, mock data shaped for the SaaS idea
34
+ - **Out of scope:** Real backend / database, authentication, real-time features, SEO optimization, accessibility audit
35
+ - **Customization beyond the rebrand:** None during the initial pass — match 1:1 visually, swap copy/brand only
36
+
37
+ If the user provides additional instructions (specific fidelity level, deeper customizations, extra context), honor those over the defaults.
38
+
39
+ ## Pre-Flight
40
+
41
+ 1. **Read `launchframe.config.json`** (see Step 0 above). After a fresh `npx launchframe` scaffold, proceed immediately — only echo `url`/`idea` for confirmation if the config looks wrong or the user asked to verify.
42
+ 2. **Browser automation.** Prefer an MCP (Chrome DevTools MCP, Playwright MCP, Browserbase MCP, etc.) when it is healthy. **If MCP is missing or in an error state, run `npm run recon` (Playwright)** — see `scripts/recon-playwright.mjs`. It writes `docs/research/computed-snapshot.json`, `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md`, and full-page screenshots under `docs/design-references/`. Use `npm run recon:headed` if headless hits a WAF/challenge page. One-time install: `npx playwright install chromium`. Do not skip extraction — adapt the pipeline to the tools that work.
43
+ 3. Validate the resolved URL(s). Normalize and verify each is accessible via your browser MCP tool. If any are invalid, ask the user to correct `launchframe.config.json` (or pass an override) before proceeding.
44
+ 4. Verify the base project builds: `npm run build`. The Next.js + shadcn/ui + Tailwind v4 scaffold should already be in place. If not, tell the user to run `npm install` first.
45
+ 5. Create the output directories if they don't exist: `docs/research/`, `docs/research/components/`, `docs/design-references/`, `scripts/`. Plan `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md` as soon as media is inventoried. For multiple clones, also prepare per-site folders like `docs/research/<hostname>/` and `docs/design-references/<hostname>/`.
46
+ 6. When working with multiple sites in one command, optionally confirm whether to run them in parallel (recommended, if resources allow) or sequentially to avoid overload.
47
+
48
+ ## Guiding Principles
49
+
50
+ These are the truths that separate a successful clone from a "close enough" mess. Internalize them — they should inform every decision you make.
51
+
52
+ ### 0. Launchframe priorities: media & motion (do not defer)
53
+
54
+ **Raster & video are first-class.** Before you treat the page as “mostly typography,” run a dedicated **media inventory** (see `@docs/research/INSPECTION_GUIDE.md` Priority section): every `<img>`, `<picture>` / `<source>`, `<video>` (+ poster), and non-trivial `background-image`. Download to `public/images/` and `public/videos/` and write `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md` (URL → local path, or `BLOCKED` + reason). Component specs MUST list concrete `public/...` paths; if you use a placeholder, say why in `docs/research/EXTRACTION_LIMITATIONS.md`. Never silently drop a hero layer, reel, or og visual.
55
+
56
+ **Motion defaults to Framer Motion.** This template lists `framer-motion` as a dependency. After foundation tokens, ensure `import { motion } from "framer-motion"` (and related APIs: `useScroll`, `useTransform`, `AnimatePresence`, `LayoutGroup`) for: scroll-triggered reveals, staggered children, layout transitions, and gestures — anything beyond a trivial one-property CSS `transition`. In each spec file, add a **Motion** subsection: trigger, duration, easing, delay/stagger, and **implementation: CSS | framer-motion**. Prefer CSS only when it matches the target exactly without JS.
57
+
58
+ ### 1. Completeness Beats Speed
59
+
60
+ Every builder agent must receive **everything** it needs to do its job perfectly: screenshot, exact CSS values, downloaded assets with local paths, real text content, component structure. If a builder has to guess anything — a color, a font size, a padding value — you have failed at extraction. Take the extra minute to extract one more property rather than shipping an incomplete brief.
61
+
62
+ ### 2. Small Tasks, Perfect Results
63
+
64
+ When an agent gets "build the entire features section," it glosses over details — it approximates spacing, guesses font sizes, and produces something "close enough" but clearly wrong. When it gets a single focused component with exact CSS values, it nails it every time.
65
+
66
+ Look at each section and judge its complexity. A simple banner with a heading and a button? One agent. A complex section with 3 different card variants, each with unique hover states and internal layouts? One agent per card variant plus one for the section wrapper. When in doubt, make it smaller.
67
+
68
+ **Complexity budget rule:** If a builder prompt exceeds ~150 lines of spec content, the section is too complex for one agent. Break it into smaller pieces. This is a mechanical check — don't override it with "but it's all related."
69
+
70
+ ### 3. Real Content, Real Assets
71
+
72
+ Extract the actual text, images, videos, and SVGs from the live site. This is a clone, not a mockup. Use `element.textContent`, download every `<img>` and `<video>`, extract inline `<svg>` elements as React components. The only time you generate content is when something is clearly server-generated and unique per session.
73
+
74
+ **Layered assets matter.** A section that looks like one image is often multiple layers — a background watercolor/gradient, a foreground UI mockup PNG, an overlay icon. Inspect each container's full DOM tree and enumerate ALL `<img>` elements and background images within it, including absolutely-positioned overlays. Missing an overlay image makes the clone look empty even if the background is correct.
75
+
76
+ ### 4. Foundation First
77
+
78
+ Nothing can be built until the foundation exists: global CSS with the target site's design tokens (colors, fonts, spacing), TypeScript types for the content structures, and global assets (fonts, favicons). This is sequential and non-negotiable. Everything after this can be parallel.
79
+
80
+ ### 5. Extract How It Looks AND How It Behaves
81
+
82
+ A website is not a screenshot — it's a living thing. Elements move, change, appear, and disappear in response to scrolling, hovering, clicking, resizing, and time. If you only extract the static CSS of each element, your clone will look right in a screenshot but feel dead when someone actually uses it.
83
+
84
+ For every element, extract its **appearance** (exact computed CSS via `getComputedStyle()`) AND its **behavior** (what changes, what triggers the change, and how the transition happens). Not "it looks like 16px" — extract the actual computed value. Not "the nav changes on scroll" — document the exact trigger (scroll position, IntersectionObserver threshold, viewport intersection), the before and after states (both sets of CSS values), and the transition (duration, easing, CSS transition vs. JS-driven vs. CSS `animation-timeline`).
85
+
86
+ Examples of behaviors to watch for — these are illustrative, not exhaustive. The page may do things not on this list, and you must catch those too:
87
+ - A navbar that shrinks, changes background, or gains a shadow after scrolling past a threshold
88
+ - Elements that animate into view when they enter the viewport (fade-up, slide-in, stagger delays)
89
+ - Sections that snap into place on scroll (`scroll-snap-type`)
90
+ - Parallax layers that move at different rates than the scroll
91
+ - Hover states that animate (not just change — the transition duration and easing matter)
92
+ - Dropdowns, modals, accordions with enter/exit animations
93
+ - Scroll-driven progress indicators or opacity transitions
94
+ - Auto-playing carousels or cycling content
95
+ - Dark-to-light (or any theme) transitions between page sections
96
+ - **Tabbed/pill content that cycles** — buttons that switch visible card sets with transitions
97
+ - **Scroll-driven tab/accordion switching** — sidebars where the active item auto-changes as content scrolls past (IntersectionObserver, NOT click handlers)
98
+ - **Smooth scroll libraries** (Lenis, Locomotive Scroll) — check for `.lenis` class or scroll container wrappers
99
+
100
+ ### 6. Identify the Interaction Model Before Building
101
+
102
+ This is the single most expensive mistake in cloning: building a click-based UI when the original is scroll-driven, or vice versa. Before writing any builder prompt for an interactive section, you must definitively answer: **Is this section driven by clicks, scrolls, hovers, time, or some combination?**
103
+
104
+ How to determine this:
105
+ 1. **Don't click first.** Scroll through the section slowly and observe if things change on their own as you scroll.
106
+ 2. If they do, it's scroll-driven. Extract the mechanism: `IntersectionObserver`, `scroll-snap`, `position: sticky`, `animation-timeline`, or JS scroll listeners.
107
+ 3. If nothing changes on scroll, THEN click/hover to test for click/hover-driven interactivity.
108
+ 4. Document the interaction model explicitly in the component spec: "INTERACTION MODEL: scroll-driven with IntersectionObserver" or "INTERACTION MODEL: click-to-switch with opacity transition."
109
+
110
+ A section with a sticky sidebar and scrolling content panels is fundamentally different from a tabbed interface where clicking switches content. Getting this wrong means a complete rewrite, not a CSS tweak.
111
+
112
+ ### 7. Extract Every State, Not Just the Default
113
+
114
+ Many components have multiple visual states — a tab bar shows different cards per tab, a header looks different at scroll position 0 vs 100, a card has hover effects. You must extract ALL states, not just whatever is visible on page load.
115
+
116
+ For tabbed/stateful content:
117
+ - Click each tab/button via browser MCP
118
+ - Extract the content, images, and card data for EACH state
119
+ - Record which content belongs to which state
120
+ - Note the transition animation between states (opacity, slide, fade, etc.)
121
+
122
+ For scroll-dependent elements:
123
+ - Capture computed styles at scroll position 0 (initial state)
124
+ - Scroll past the trigger threshold and capture computed styles again (scrolled state)
125
+ - Diff the two to identify exactly which CSS properties change
126
+ - Record the transition CSS (duration, easing, properties)
127
+ - Record the exact trigger threshold (scroll position in px, or viewport intersection ratio)
128
+
129
+ ### 8. Spec Files Are the Source of Truth
130
+
131
+ Every component gets a specification file in `docs/research/components/` BEFORE any builder is dispatched. This file is the contract between your extraction work and the builder agent. The builder receives the spec file contents inline in its prompt — the file also persists as an auditable artifact that the user (or you) can review if something looks wrong.
132
+
133
+ The spec file is not optional. It is not a nice-to-have. If you dispatch a builder without first writing a spec file, you are shipping incomplete instructions based on whatever you can remember from a browser MCP session, and the builder will guess to fill gaps.
134
+
135
+ ### 9. Build Must Always Compile
136
+
137
+ Every builder agent must verify `npx tsc --noEmit` passes before finishing. After merging worktrees, you verify `npm run build` passes. A broken build is never acceptable, even temporarily.
138
+
139
+ ## Phase 1: Reconnaissance
140
+
141
+ Navigate to the target URL with browser MCP.
142
+
143
+ ### Screenshots
144
+ - Take **full-page screenshots** at desktop (1440px) and mobile (390px) viewports
145
+ - Save to `docs/design-references/` with descriptive names
146
+ - These are your master reference — builders will receive section-specific crops/screenshots later
147
+
148
+ ### Global Extraction
149
+ Extract these from the page before doing anything else:
150
+
151
+ **Fonts** — Inspect `<link>` tags for Google Fonts or self-hosted fonts. Check computed `font-family` on key elements (headings, body, code, labels). Document every family, weight, and style actually used. Configure them in `src/app/layout.tsx` using `next/font/google` or `next/font/local`.
152
+
153
+ **Colors** — Extract the site's color palette from computed styles across the page. Update `src/app/globals.css` with the target's actual colors in the `:root` and `.dark` CSS variable blocks. Map them to shadcn's token names (background, foreground, primary, muted, etc.) where they fit. Add custom properties for colors that don't map to shadcn tokens.
154
+
155
+ **Favicons & Meta** — Download favicons, apple-touch-icons, OG images, webmanifest to `public/seo/`. Update `layout.tsx` metadata.
156
+
157
+ **Global UI patterns** — Identify any site-wide CSS or JS: custom scrollbar hiding, scroll-snap on the page container, global keyframe animations, backdrop filters, gradients used as overlays, **smooth scroll libraries** (Lenis, Locomotive Scroll — check for `.lenis`, `.locomotive-scroll`, or custom scroll container classes). Add these to `globals.css` and note any libraries that need to be installed.
158
+
159
+ ### Mandatory Interaction Sweep
160
+
161
+ This is a dedicated pass AFTER screenshots and BEFORE anything else. Its purpose is to discover every behavior on the page — many of which are invisible in a static screenshot.
162
+
163
+ **Scroll sweep:** Scroll the page slowly from top to bottom via browser MCP. At each section, pause and observe:
164
+ - Does the header change appearance? Record the scroll position where it triggers.
165
+ - Do elements animate into view? Record which ones and the animation type.
166
+ - Does a sidebar or tab indicator auto-switch as you scroll? Record the mechanism.
167
+ - Are there scroll-snap points? Record which containers.
168
+ - Is there a smooth scroll library active? Check for non-native scroll behavior.
169
+
170
+ **Click sweep:** Click every element that looks interactive:
171
+ - Every button, tab, pill, link, card
172
+ - Record what happens: does content change? Does a modal open? Does a dropdown appear?
173
+ - For tabs/pills: click EACH ONE and record the content that appears for each state
174
+
175
+ **Hover sweep:** Hover over every element that might have hover states:
176
+ - Buttons, cards, links, images, nav items
177
+ - Record what changes: color, scale, shadow, underline, opacity
178
+
179
+ **Responsive sweep:** Test at 3 viewport widths via browser MCP:
180
+ - Desktop: 1440px
181
+ - Tablet: 768px
182
+ - Mobile: 390px
183
+ - At each width, note which sections change layout (column → stack, sidebar disappears, etc.) and at approximately which breakpoint the change occurs.
184
+
185
+ Save all findings to `docs/research/BEHAVIORS.md`. This is your behavior bible — reference it when writing every component spec.
186
+
187
+ ### Page Topology
188
+ Map out every distinct section of the page from top to bottom. Give each a working name. Document:
189
+ - Their visual order
190
+ - Which are fixed/sticky overlays vs. flow content
191
+ - The overall page layout (scroll container, column structure, z-index layers)
192
+ - Dependencies between sections (e.g., a floating nav that overlays everything)
193
+ - **The interaction model** of each section (static, click-driven, scroll-driven, time-driven)
194
+
195
+ Save this as `docs/research/PAGE_TOPOLOGY.md` — it becomes your assembly blueprint.
196
+
197
+ ## Phase 2: Foundation Build
198
+
199
+ This is sequential. Do it yourself (not delegated to an agent) since it touches many files:
200
+
201
+ 1. **Update fonts** in `layout.tsx` to match the target site's actual fonts
202
+ 2. **Confirm Framer Motion** — `framer-motion` should already be in `package.json`. If missing, add it (`npm install framer-motion`) so builders can import `motion` without ad-hoc library drift.
203
+ 3. **Update globals.css** with the target's color tokens, spacing values, keyframe animations, utility classes, and any **global scroll behaviors** (Lenis, smooth scroll CSS, scroll-snap on body)
204
+ 4. **Media inventory + download (early, high priority)** — run the asset discovery script (below) via browser MCP, write `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md`, then implement **`scripts/download-assets.mjs`** and execute it so **images** land in `public/images/` and **videos** (+ posters) in `public/videos/` (or a clear subdirectory scheme under `public/`). Batch parallel downloads (4 concurrent) with errors logged — do not claim success if URLs failed. This step should complete **before** most section components are built so builders use real paths.
205
+ 5. **Create TypeScript interfaces** in `src/types/` for the content structures you've observed
206
+ 6. **Extract SVG icons** — find all inline `<svg>` elements on the page, deduplicate them, and save as named React components in `src/components/icons.tsx`. Name them by visual function (e.g., `SearchIcon`, `ArrowRightIcon`, `LogoIcon`).
207
+ 7. Verify: `npm run build` passes
208
+
209
+ ### Asset Discovery Script Pattern
210
+
211
+ Use browser MCP to enumerate all assets on the page:
212
+
213
+ ```javascript
214
+ // Run this via browser MCP to discover all assets
215
+ JSON.stringify({
216
+ images: [...document.querySelectorAll('img')].map(img => ({
217
+ src: img.src || img.currentSrc,
218
+ alt: img.alt,
219
+ width: img.naturalWidth,
220
+ height: img.naturalHeight,
221
+ // Include parent info to detect layered compositions
222
+ parentClasses: img.parentElement?.className,
223
+ siblings: img.parentElement ? [...img.parentElement.querySelectorAll('img')].length : 0,
224
+ position: getComputedStyle(img).position,
225
+ zIndex: getComputedStyle(img).zIndex
226
+ })),
227
+ videos: [...document.querySelectorAll('video')].map(v => ({
228
+ src: v.src || v.querySelector('source')?.src,
229
+ poster: v.poster,
230
+ autoplay: v.autoplay,
231
+ loop: v.loop,
232
+ muted: v.muted
233
+ })),
234
+ backgroundImages: [...document.querySelectorAll('*')].filter(el => {
235
+ const bg = getComputedStyle(el).backgroundImage;
236
+ return bg && bg !== 'none';
237
+ }).map(el => ({
238
+ url: getComputedStyle(el).backgroundImage,
239
+ element: el.tagName + '.' + el.className?.split(' ')[0]
240
+ })),
241
+ svgCount: document.querySelectorAll('svg').length,
242
+ fonts: [...new Set([...document.querySelectorAll('*')].slice(0, 200).map(el => getComputedStyle(el).fontFamily))],
243
+ favicons: [...document.querySelectorAll('link[rel*="icon"]')].map(l => ({ href: l.href, sizes: l.sizes?.toString() }))
244
+ });
245
+ ```
246
+
247
+ Then write a download script that fetches everything to `public/`. Use batched parallel downloads (4 at a time) with proper error handling.
248
+
249
+ ## Phase 3: Component Specification & Dispatch
250
+
251
+ This is the core loop. For each section in your page topology (top to bottom), you do THREE things: **extract**, **write the spec file**, then **dispatch builders**.
252
+
253
+ ### Step 1: Extract
254
+
255
+ For each section, use browser MCP to extract everything:
256
+
257
+ 1. **Screenshot** the section in isolation (scroll to it, screenshot the viewport). Save to `docs/design-references/`.
258
+
259
+ 2. **Extract CSS** for every element in the section. Use the extraction script below — don't hand-measure individual properties. Run it once per component container and capture the full output:
260
+
261
+ ```javascript
262
+ // Per-component extraction — run via browser MCP
263
+ // Replace SELECTOR with the actual CSS selector for the component
264
+ (function(selector) {
265
+ const el = document.querySelector(selector);
266
+ if (!el) return JSON.stringify({ error: 'Element not found: ' + selector });
267
+ const props = [
268
+ 'fontSize','fontWeight','fontFamily','lineHeight','letterSpacing','color',
269
+ 'textTransform','textDecoration','backgroundColor','background',
270
+ 'padding','paddingTop','paddingRight','paddingBottom','paddingLeft',
271
+ 'margin','marginTop','marginRight','marginBottom','marginLeft',
272
+ 'width','height','maxWidth','minWidth','maxHeight','minHeight',
273
+ 'display','flexDirection','justifyContent','alignItems','gap',
274
+ 'gridTemplateColumns','gridTemplateRows',
275
+ 'borderRadius','border','borderTop','borderBottom','borderLeft','borderRight',
276
+ 'boxShadow','overflow','overflowX','overflowY',
277
+ 'position','top','right','bottom','left','zIndex',
278
+ 'opacity','transform','transition','cursor',
279
+ 'objectFit','objectPosition','mixBlendMode','filter','backdropFilter',
280
+ 'whiteSpace','textOverflow','WebkitLineClamp'
281
+ ];
282
+ function extractStyles(element) {
283
+ const cs = getComputedStyle(element);
284
+ const styles = {};
285
+ props.forEach(p => { const v = cs[p]; if (v && v !== 'none' && v !== 'normal' && v !== 'auto' && v !== '0px' && v !== 'rgba(0, 0, 0, 0)') styles[p] = v; });
286
+ return styles;
287
+ }
288
+ function walk(element, depth) {
289
+ if (depth > 4) return null;
290
+ const children = [...element.children];
291
+ return {
292
+ tag: element.tagName.toLowerCase(),
293
+ classes: element.className?.toString().split(' ').slice(0, 5).join(' '),
294
+ text: element.childNodes.length === 1 && element.childNodes[0].nodeType === 3 ? element.textContent.trim().slice(0, 200) : null,
295
+ styles: extractStyles(element),
296
+ images: element.tagName === 'IMG' ? { src: element.src, alt: element.alt, naturalWidth: element.naturalWidth, naturalHeight: element.naturalHeight } : null,
297
+ childCount: children.length,
298
+ children: children.slice(0, 20).map(c => walk(c, depth + 1)).filter(Boolean)
299
+ };
300
+ }
301
+ return JSON.stringify(walk(el, 0), null, 2);
302
+ })('SELECTOR');
303
+ ```
304
+
305
+ 3. **Extract multi-state styles** — for any element with multiple states (scroll-triggered, hover, active tab), capture BOTH states:
306
+
307
+ ```javascript
308
+ // State A: capture styles at current state (e.g., scroll position 0)
309
+ // Then trigger the state change (scroll, click, hover via browser MCP)
310
+ // State B: re-run the extraction script on the same element
311
+ // The diff between A and B IS the behavior specification
312
+ ```
313
+
314
+ Record the diff explicitly: "Property X changes from VALUE_A to VALUE_B, triggered by TRIGGER, with transition: TRANSITION_CSS."
315
+
316
+ 4. **Extract real content** — all text, alt attributes, aria labels, placeholder text. Use `element.textContent` for each text node. For tabbed/stateful content, **click each tab and extract content per state**.
317
+
318
+ 5. **Identify assets** this section uses — which downloaded images/videos from `public/`, which icon components from `icons.tsx`. Check for **layered images** (multiple `<img>` or background-images stacked in the same container).
319
+
320
+ 6. **Assess complexity** — how many distinct sub-components does this section contain? A distinct sub-component is an element with its own unique styling, structure, and behavior (e.g., a card, a nav item, a search panel).
321
+
322
+ ### Step 2: Write the Component Spec File
323
+
324
+ For each section (or sub-component, if you're breaking it up), create a spec file in `docs/research/components/`. This is NOT optional — every builder must have a corresponding spec file.
325
+
326
+ **File path:** `docs/research/components/<component-name>.spec.md`
327
+
328
+ **Template:**
329
+
330
+ ```markdown
331
+ # <ComponentName> Specification
332
+
333
+ ## Overview
334
+ - **Target file:** `src/components/<ComponentName>.tsx`
335
+ - **Screenshot:** `docs/design-references/<screenshot-name>.png`
336
+ - **Interaction model:** <static | click-driven | scroll-driven | time-driven>
337
+
338
+ ## DOM Structure
339
+ <Describe the element hierarchy — what contains what>
340
+
341
+ ## Computed Styles (exact values from getComputedStyle)
342
+
343
+ ### Container
344
+ - display: ...
345
+ - padding: ...
346
+ - maxWidth: ...
347
+ - (every relevant property with exact values)
348
+
349
+ ### <Child element 1>
350
+ - fontSize: ...
351
+ - color: ...
352
+ - (every relevant property)
353
+
354
+ ### <Child element N>
355
+ ...
356
+
357
+ ## States & Behaviors
358
+
359
+ ### <Behavior name, e.g., "Scroll-triggered floating mode">
360
+ - **Trigger:** <exact mechanism — scroll position 50px, IntersectionObserver rootMargin "-30% 0px", click on .tab-button, hover>
361
+ - **State A (before):** maxWidth: 100vw, boxShadow: none, borderRadius: 0
362
+ - **State B (after):** maxWidth: 1200px, boxShadow: 0 4px 20px rgba(0,0,0,0.1), borderRadius: 16px
363
+ - **Transition:** transition: all 0.3s ease
364
+ - **Implementation approach:** <CSS transition + scroll listener | IntersectionObserver | CSS animation-timeline | **framer-motion** (`motion`, `whileInView`, stagger container) | etc.>
365
+
366
+ ### Hover states
367
+ - **<Element>:** <property>: <before> → <after>, transition: <value>
368
+
369
+ ## Motion (Framer Motion vs CSS)
370
+ - **Entrance / scroll reveals:** <e.g. fade+translateY, staggerChildren — specify duration, easing, delay, viewport `once`/`margin`>
371
+ - **Library:** <`framer-motion` | CSS-only — justify if CSS-only>
372
+ - **Keyframes / springs:** <if any — match target curve>
373
+
374
+ ## Per-State Content (if applicable)
375
+
376
+ ### State: "Featured"
377
+ - Title: "..."
378
+ - Subtitle: "..."
379
+ - Cards: [{ title, description, image, link }, ...]
380
+
381
+ ### State: "Productivity"
382
+ - Title: "..."
383
+ - Cards: [...]
384
+
385
+ ## Assets (images & video — required detail)
386
+ - Raster: `public/images/<file>` — dimensions, `object-fit`, lazy if below fold
387
+ - Video: `public/videos/<file>` — poster `public/images/...` or `public/videos/...`, autoplay/muted/loop, controls
388
+ - Background layers: which div uses `background-image` and resolved URL → local path
389
+ - Icons used: <ArrowIcon>, <SearchIcon> from icons.tsx
390
+
391
+ ## Text Content (verbatim)
392
+ <All text content, copy-pasted from the live site>
393
+
394
+ ## Responsive Behavior
395
+ - **Desktop (1440px):** <layout description>
396
+ - **Tablet (768px):** <what changes — e.g., "maintains 2-column, gap reduces to 16px">
397
+ - **Mobile (390px):** <what changes — e.g., "stacks to single column, images full-width">
398
+ - **Breakpoint:** layout switches at ~<N>px
399
+ ```
400
+
401
+ Fill every section. If a section doesn't apply (e.g., no states for a static footer), write "N/A" — but think twice before marking States & Behaviors as N/A. Even a footer might have hover states on links.
402
+
403
+ ### Step 3: Dispatch Builders
404
+
405
+ Based on complexity, dispatch builder agent(s) in worktree(s):
406
+
407
+ **Simple section** (1-2 sub-components): One builder agent gets the entire section.
408
+
409
+ **Complex section** (3+ distinct sub-components): Break it up. One agent per sub-component, plus one agent for the section wrapper that imports them. Sub-component builders go first since the wrapper depends on them.
410
+
411
+ **What every builder agent receives:**
412
+ - The full contents of its component spec file (inline in the prompt — don't say "go read the spec file")
413
+ - Path to the section screenshot in `docs/design-references/`
414
+ - Which shared components to import (`icons.tsx`, `cn()`, shadcn primitives)
415
+ - The target file path (e.g., `src/components/HeroSection.tsx`)
416
+ - Instruction to verify with `npx tsc --noEmit` before finishing
417
+ - For responsive behavior: the specific breakpoint values and what changes
418
+
419
+ **Don't wait.** As soon as you've dispatched the builder(s) for one section, move to extracting the next section. Builders work in parallel in their worktrees while you continue extraction.
420
+
421
+ ### Step 4: Merge
422
+
423
+ As builder agents complete their work:
424
+ - Merge their worktree branches into main
425
+ - You have full context on what each agent built, so resolve any conflicts intelligently
426
+ - After each merge, verify the build still passes: `npm run build`
427
+ - If a merge introduces type errors, fix them immediately
428
+
429
+ The extract → spec → dispatch → merge cycle continues until all sections are built.
430
+
431
+ ## Phase 4: Page Assembly
432
+
433
+ After all sections are built and merged, wire everything together in `src/app/page.tsx`:
434
+
435
+ - Import all section components
436
+ - Implement the page-level layout from your topology doc (scroll containers, column structures, sticky positioning, z-index layering)
437
+ - Connect real content to component props
438
+ - Implement page-level behaviors: scroll snap, scroll-driven animations, dark-to-light transitions, intersection observers, smooth scroll (Lenis etc.)
439
+ - Verify: `npm run build` passes clean
440
+
441
+ ## Phase 4.5: SaaS Rebrand Pass
442
+
443
+ The pixel-perfect clone is done — now re-skin it for the SaaS idea from `launchframe.config.json`.
444
+
445
+ **Guiding rule:** swap words and brand marks, leave structure untouched. The original site's visual hierarchy was already validated by a real product team. Your job is to put the user's product into that proven shell, not to redesign it.
446
+
447
+ For every section, replace:
448
+
449
+ 1. **Product name & logo** — wherever the original brand appears, use the SaaS idea's name (derive a short product name from the `idea` string if one isn't supplied — keep it 1–2 words, easy to lockup). Replace the wordmark text in place. For the logo glyph, either reuse the original SVG silhouette with a fresh fill, or use a Lucide icon that matches the SaaS category (e.g., `Brain` for AI, `Workflow` for automation, `Sparkles` for generative tooling). Do NOT keep the original brand's actual logo file.
450
+ 2. **Hero headline & sub-headline** — write fresh copy that pitches the SaaS idea, using the original line lengths and tone as constraints. If the original is 6 words, write 6 words. If it's 14, write 14. Match emphasis, line breaks, and any inline highlighted phrase.
451
+ 3. **Feature/section copy** — rewrite each feature card, callout, stat, and testimonial to fit the SaaS idea. Preserve the count and shape of items (3 feature cards stay 3 feature cards; a 4-column logo bar stays 4 columns). Generate plausible customer-logo names — never use real company names you haven't been authorized to use.
452
+ 4. **CTA labels** — adapt button text to the SaaS idea ("Start free", "Get a demo", "Try it free", etc.). Keep the CTA hierarchy (primary/secondary) identical to the original.
453
+ 5. **Mock data** — for product UI mockups embedded in marketing screenshots (e.g., a fake dashboard inside a hero), generate mock data shaped for the SaaS idea: realistic-looking but fictional rows, charts, conversation logs, etc.
454
+ 6. **Imagery** — placeholder-swap any photography or product screenshots that depict the original brand. Prefer using:
455
+ - A neutral abstract gradient / shape composition you generate with CSS or SVG
456
+ - A Lucide icon arrangement
457
+ - Placeholder service URLs only if explicitly allowed by the user
458
+ Keep dimensions, aspect ratios, drop shadows, and surrounding spacing identical to the original.
459
+ 7. **Metadata** — update `<title>`, meta description, OG tags, and favicon manifest in `src/app/layout.tsx` to reflect the new SaaS. Generate a simple favicon (initial letter on a brand-colored square) if no asset is provided.
460
+
461
+ What you must NOT change in this pass:
462
+ - Spacing, padding, typography scale, color tokens, **animation timing & motion choreography** (including Framer Motion `variants` / `transition` props), responsive breakpoints — those are still 1:1 to the original
463
+ - Section order, section count, component structure
464
+ - Interaction models (scroll-driven stays scroll-driven, etc.)
465
+ - Any computed-style value extracted in Phase 3
466
+
467
+ After the rebrand pass, the codebase should look like the original site visually but read like the user's SaaS at a glance. Save a short `docs/research/REBRAND.md` summarizing the product name you chose, the headline rewrites, and any assets you swapped — so the user can audit what's clone-derived vs. authored.
468
+
469
+ ## Phase 5: Visual QA Diff
470
+
471
+ After assembly, do NOT declare the clone complete. Take side-by-side comparison screenshots:
472
+
473
+ 1. Open the original site and your clone side-by-side (or take screenshots at the same viewport widths)
474
+ 2. Compare section by section, top to bottom, at desktop (1440px)
475
+ 3. Compare again at mobile (390px)
476
+ 4. For each discrepancy found:
477
+ - Check the component spec file — was the value extracted correctly?
478
+ - If the spec was wrong: re-extract from browser MCP, update the spec, fix the component
479
+ - If the spec was right but the builder got it wrong: fix the component to match the spec
480
+ 5. Test all interactive behaviors: scroll through the page, click every button/tab, hover over interactive elements
481
+ 6. Verify smooth scroll feels right, header transitions work, tab switching works, animations play
482
+
483
+ Only after this visual QA pass is the clone complete.
484
+
485
+ ## Pre-Dispatch Checklist
486
+
487
+ Before dispatching ANY builder agent, verify you can check every box. If you can't, go back and extract more.
488
+
489
+ - [ ] Spec file written to `docs/research/components/<name>.spec.md` with ALL sections filled
490
+ - [ ] Every CSS value in the spec is from `getComputedStyle()`, not estimated
491
+ - [ ] Interaction model is identified and documented (static / click / scroll / time)
492
+ - [ ] For stateful components: every state's content and styles are captured
493
+ - [ ] For scroll-driven components: trigger threshold, before/after styles, and transition are recorded
494
+ - [ ] For hover states: before/after values and transition timing are recorded
495
+ - [ ] All images in the section are identified (including overlays and layered compositions)
496
+ - [ ] Any `<video>` (and poster), Lottie, or canvas-driven hero is identified — not approximated as a static div
497
+ - [ ] **Motion** subsection filled: CSS vs **framer-motion**, durations, easings, stagger, scroll triggers
498
+ - [ ] Responsive behavior is documented for at least desktop and mobile
499
+ - [ ] Text content is verbatim from the site, not paraphrased
500
+ - [ ] The builder prompt is under ~150 lines of spec; if over, the section needs to be split
501
+
502
+ ## What NOT to Do
503
+
504
+ These are lessons from previous failed clones — each one cost hours of rework:
505
+
506
+ - **Don't build click-based tabs when the original is scroll-driven (or vice versa).** Determine the interaction model FIRST by scrolling before clicking. This is the #1 most expensive mistake — it requires a complete rewrite, not a CSS fix.
507
+ - **Don't extract only the default state.** If there are tabs showing "Featured" on load, click Productivity, Creative, Lifestyle and extract each one's cards/content. If the header changes on scroll, capture styles at position 0 AND position 100+.
508
+ - **Don't miss overlay/layered images.** A background watercolor + foreground UI mockup = 2 images. Check every container's DOM tree for multiple `<img>` elements and positioned overlays.
509
+ - **Don't build mockup components for content that's actually videos/animations.** Check if a section uses `<video>`, Lottie, or canvas before building elaborate HTML mockups of what the video shows.
510
+ - **Don't approximate CSS classes.** "It looks like `text-lg`" is wrong if the computed value is `18px` and `text-lg` is `18px/28px` but the actual line-height is `24px`. Extract exact values.
511
+ - **Don't build everything in one monolithic commit.** The whole point of this pipeline is incremental progress with verified builds at each step.
512
+ - **Don't reference docs from builder prompts.** Each builder gets the CSS spec inline in its prompt — never "see DESIGN_TOKENS.md for colors." The builder should have zero need to read external docs.
513
+ - **Don't skip asset extraction.** Without real images, videos, and fonts, the clone will always look fake regardless of how perfect the CSS is.
514
+ - **Don't defer image/video download to the end.** Run `MEDIA_MANIFEST.md` + `download-assets.mjs` during foundation so components reference real `public/` paths from the first build.
515
+ - **Don't fake complex motion with a single CSS `transition` when the target uses staggered, scroll-scrubbed, or layout-driven animation** — use **`framer-motion`** (`motion`, `whileInView`, `variants`, `staggerChildren`) and match duration/easing from extraction.
516
+ - **Don't give a builder agent too much scope.** If you're writing a builder prompt and it's getting long because the section is complex, that's a signal to break it into smaller tasks.
517
+ - **Don't bundle unrelated sections into one agent.** A CTA section and a footer are different components with different designs — don't hand them both to one agent and hope for the best.
518
+ - **Don't skip responsive extraction.** If you only inspect at desktop width, the clone will break at tablet and mobile. Test at 1440, 768, and 390 during extraction.
519
+ - **Don't forget smooth scroll libraries.** Check for Lenis (`.lenis` class), Locomotive Scroll, or similar. Default browser scrolling feels noticeably different and the user will spot it immediately.
520
+ - **Don't dispatch builders without a spec file.** The spec file forces exhaustive extraction and creates an auditable artifact. Skipping it means the builder gets whatever you can fit in a prompt from memory.
521
+
522
+ ## Completion
523
+
524
+ When done, report:
525
+ - Source URL cloned (from `launchframe.config.json` or `$ARGUMENTS`)
526
+ - SaaS idea applied (from `launchframe.config.json`) and the product name you chose
527
+ - Total sections built
528
+ - Total components created
529
+ - Total spec files written (should match components)
530
+ - Total assets downloaded (images, videos, SVGs, fonts) — path to `docs/research/MEDIA_MANIFEST.md`
531
+ - Rebrand summary (path to `docs/research/REBRAND.md`)
532
+ - Build status (`npm run build` result)
533
+ - Visual QA results (any remaining discrepancies)
534
+ - Any known gaps or limitations