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Author SHA1 Message Date
Drew Ritter
a490478f8a fix: replace hardcoded /Users/jesse with generic placeholders (#858) 2026-04-13 11:43:54 -07:00
Drew Ritter
998c40be29 docs: soften Step 1a native-tool framing per PR #1121 review
Address obra's comment on explicit step numbers / prescriptive tone.
Drops "STOP HERE if available", the "If YES:" gate, and the "even if /
even if / NO EXCEPTIONS" reinforcement paragraph. Keeps the specific
tool-name anchors (EnterWorktree, WorktreeCreate, /worktree, --worktree),
which the original TDD data showed are load-bearing.

A/B verified against drill harness on the 3 creation/consent scenarios
(consent-flow, creation-from-main, creation-from-main-spec-aware):
baseline explicit wording scored 12/12 criteria, softened wording also
scored 12/12. The "agent used the most appropriate tool" criterion
passed in all 3 softened runs — agents still picked EnterWorktree via
ToolSearch without the imperative framing.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-13 11:43:45 -07:00
Drew Ritter
98263ce179 docs: address PR #1121 review — respect user preference, drop y/n
- Consent prompt: drop "(y/n)" and add escape valve for users who
  have already declared their worktree preference in global or
  project agent instruction files.
- Directory selection: reorder to put declared user preference
  ahead of observed filesystem state, and reframe the default as
  "if no other guidance available".
- Sandbox fallback: require explicitly informing the user that
  the sandbox blocked creation, not just "report accordingly".
- writing-plans: fully qualify the superpowers:using-git-worktrees
  reference.
- Plan doc: mirror the consent-prompt change.

Step 1a native-tool framing and the helper-scripts suggestion are
still outstanding — the first needs a benchmark re-run before softer
phrasing can be adopted without regressing compliance; the second is
exploratory and will get a thread reply.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-04-13 09:53:08 -07:00
6 changed files with 27 additions and 25 deletions

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@@ -249,11 +249,13 @@ Report with branch state:
- On a branch: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` on branch `<name>`."
- Detached HEAD: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` (detached HEAD, externally managed). Branch creation needed at finish time."
**If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (or in a submodule):** You are in a normal repo checkout. Ask for consent before creating a workspace:
**If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (or in a submodule):** You are in a normal repo checkout.
> "Would you like me to set up an isolated worktree? This protects your current branch from changes. (y/n)"
If the user has not already made their preferences about worktree isolation clear — check global and project agent instruction files (`CLAUDE.md`, `AGENTS.md`, `GEMINI.md`, `.cursorrules`, or equivalent) — ask for consent before creating a worktree:
If yes, proceed to Step 1. If no, work in place — skip to Step 3 with no worktree.
> "Would you like me to set up an isolated worktree? It protects your current branch from changes."
Honor any existing declared preference without asking. If the user declines consent, work in place and skip to Step 3.
## Step 1: Create Isolated Workspace

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@@ -149,8 +149,8 @@ python3 tests/claude-code/analyze-token-usage.py ~/.claude/projects/<project-dir
Session transcripts are stored in `~/.claude/projects/` with the working directory path encoded:
```bash
# Example for /Users/jesse/Documents/GitHub/superpowers/superpowers
SESSION_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/-Users-jesse-Documents-GitHub-superpowers-superpowers"
# Example for /Users/yourname/Documents/GitHub/superpowers/superpowers
SESSION_DIR="$HOME/.claude/projects/-Users-yourname-Documents-GitHub-superpowers-superpowers"
# Find recent sessions
ls -lt "$SESSION_DIR"/*.jsonl | head -5

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@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ Reference example of extracting, structuring, and bulletproofing a critical skil
## Source Material
Extracted debugging framework from `/Users/jesse/.claude/CLAUDE.md`:
Extracted debugging framework from `~/.claude/CLAUDE.md`:
- 4-phase systematic process (Investigation → Pattern Analysis → Hypothesis → Implementation)
- Core mandate: ALWAYS find root cause, NEVER fix symptoms
- Rules designed to resist time pressure and rationalization

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@@ -33,7 +33,7 @@ digraph when_to_use {
### 1. Observe the Symptom
```
Error: git init failed in /Users/jesse/project/packages/core
Error: git init failed in ~/project/packages/core
```
### 2. Find Immediate Cause

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@@ -36,25 +36,25 @@ Report with branch state:
- On a branch: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` on branch `<name>`."
- Detached HEAD: "Already in isolated workspace at `<path>` (detached HEAD, externally managed). Branch creation needed at finish time."
**If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (or in a submodule):** You are in a normal repo checkout. Ask for consent before creating a workspace:
**If `GIT_DIR == GIT_COMMON` (or in a submodule):** You are in a normal repo checkout.
> "Would you like me to set up an isolated worktree? This protects your current branch from changes. (y/n)"
If the user has not already made their preferences about worktree isolation clear — check global and project agent instruction files (`CLAUDE.md`, `AGENTS.md`, `GEMINI.md`, `.cursorrules`, or equivalent) — ask for consent before creating a worktree:
If yes, proceed to Step 1. If no, work in place — skip to Step 3 with no worktree.
> "Would you like me to set up an isolated worktree? It protects your current branch from changes."
Honor any existing declared preference without asking. If the user declines consent, work in place and skip to Step 3.
## Step 1: Create Isolated Workspace
**You have two mechanisms. Try them in this order.**
### 1a. Native Worktree Tools (preferred — STOP HERE if available)
### 1a. Native Worktree Tools (preferred)
The user has asked for an isolated workspace (Step 0 consent). Check your available tools — do you have `EnterWorktree`, `WorktreeCreate`, a `/worktree` command, or a `--worktree` flag? **If YES: the user's consent to create a worktree is your authorization to use it. Use it now and skip to Step 3.**
The user has asked for an isolated workspace (Step 0 consent). Do you already have a way to create a worktree? It might be a tool with a name like `EnterWorktree`, `WorktreeCreate`, a `/worktree` command, or a `--worktree` flag. If you do, use it and skip to Step 3.
Native tools handle directory placement, branch creation, and cleanup automatically. Using `git worktree add` when you have a native tool creates phantom state your harness can't see or manage worktrees it didn't create, and cleanup becomes impossible.
Native tools handle directory placement, branch creation, and cleanup automatically. Using `git worktree add` when you have a native tool creates phantom state your harness can't see or manage.
**Even if `.worktrees/` already exists, even under time pressure, even if `git worktree add` feels faster — use your native tool.** There are no exceptions.
**Only proceed to Step 1b if you have confirmed you have NO native worktree/isolation tool.**
Only proceed to Step 1b if you have no native worktree tool available.
### 1b. Git Worktree Fallback
@@ -62,25 +62,25 @@ Native tools handle directory placement, branch creation, and cleanup automatica
#### Directory Selection
Follow this priority order:
Follow this priority order. Explicit user preference always beats observed filesystem state.
1. **Check existing directories:**
1. **Check global and project agent instruction files** (`~/.claude/CLAUDE.md`, `~/.config/gemini/AGENTS.md`, project-level `CLAUDE.md`, `AGENTS.md`, `GEMINI.md`, `.cursorrules`, or equivalent) for a declared worktree directory preference. If specified, use it without asking.
2. **Check for an existing project-local worktree directory:**
```bash
ls -d .worktrees 2>/dev/null # Preferred (hidden)
ls -d worktrees 2>/dev/null # Alternative
```
If found, use that directory. If both exist, `.worktrees` wins.
If found, use it. If both exist, `.worktrees` wins.
2. **Check for existing global directory:**
3. **Check for an existing global directory:**
```bash
project=$(basename "$(git rev-parse --show-toplevel)")
ls -d ~/.config/superpowers/worktrees/$project 2>/dev/null
```
If found, use it (backward compatibility with legacy global path).
3. **Check your project's agent instruction file** (CLAUDE.md, GEMINI.md, AGENTS.md, .cursorrules, or equivalent) for a worktree directory preference. If specified, use it without asking.
4. **Default to `.worktrees/`.**
4. **If there is no other guidance available**, default to `.worktrees/` at the project root.
#### Safety Verification (project-local directories only)
@@ -109,7 +109,7 @@ git worktree add "$path" -b "$BRANCH_NAME"
cd "$path"
```
**Sandbox fallback:** If `git worktree add` fails with a permission error (sandbox denial), treat this as a restricted environment. Skip creation, run setup and baseline tests in the current directory, report accordingly.
**Sandbox fallback:** If `git worktree add` fails with a permission error (sandbox denial), tell the user the sandbox blocked worktree creation and you're working in the current directory instead. Then run setup and baseline tests in place.
## Step 3: Project Setup

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@@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset o
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the writing-plans skill to create the implementation plan."
**Context:** If working in an isolated worktree, it should have been created via the using-git-worktrees skill at execution time.
**Context:** If working in an isolated worktree, it should have been created via the `superpowers:using-git-worktrees` skill at execution time.
**Save plans to:** `docs/superpowers/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<feature-name>.md`
- (User preferences for plan location override this default)