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writing-pl
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@@ -13,6 +13,8 @@ Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset o
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**Plans reference the spec; they never restate, paraphrase, or summarize it.** The spec owns the WHAT and WHY — requirements, acceptance criteria, design decisions; the plan owns the HOW — tasks, files, code, commands. Cite it by path in the header and by section where a task needs context. Reference discipline never means skipping the spec: if brainstorming produced one, it exists and the plan cites it. No Placeholders still requires repeating code and commands WITHIN the plan; copying FROM the spec is different: a step that needs a requirement's prose is under-specified — turn it into a concrete action. Snapshotting spec text into the plan hides drift, not prevents it. "Zero context" means each step is mechanically executable, not that the plan repeats the spec.
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**Two narrow exceptions to reference discipline** — subagents executing the plan see the plan (or a single task of it), never the spec, so two kinds of spec content travel in the plan itself: the `## Global Constraints` section (the spec's project-wide requirements, exact values copied verbatim) and each task's `**Interfaces:**` block (exact signatures). Copy those values exactly; everything else stays referenced, never restated.
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**Announce at start:** "I'm using the writing-plans skill to create the implementation plan."
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**Context:** If working in an isolated worktree, it should have been created via the `superpowers:using-git-worktrees` skill at execution time.
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@@ -35,6 +37,15 @@ Before defining tasks, map out which files will be created or modified and what
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This structure informs the task decomposition. Each task should produce self-contained changes that make sense independently.
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## Task Right-Sizing
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A task is the smallest unit that carries its own test cycle and is worth a
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fresh reviewer's gate. When drawing task boundaries: fold setup,
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configuration, scaffolding, and documentation steps into the task whose
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deliverable needs them; split only where a reviewer could meaningfully
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reject one task while approving its neighbor. Each task ends with an
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independently testable deliverable.
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## Bite-Sized Task Granularity
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**Each step is one action (2-5 minutes):**
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@@ -61,6 +72,13 @@ This structure informs the task decomposition. Each task should produce self-con
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**Tech Stack:** [Key technologies/libraries]
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## Global Constraints
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[The spec's project-wide requirements — version floors, dependency limits,
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naming and copy rules, platform requirements — one line each, with exact
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values copied verbatim from the spec. Every task's requirements implicitly
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include this section.]
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---
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```
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@@ -74,6 +92,12 @@ This structure informs the task decomposition. Each task should produce self-con
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- Modify: `exact/path/to/existing.py:123-145`
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- Test: `tests/exact/path/to/test.py`
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**Interfaces:**
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- Consumes: [what this task uses from earlier tasks — exact signatures]
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- Produces: [what later tasks rely on — exact function names, parameter
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and return types. A task's implementer sees only their own task; this
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block is how they learn the names and types neighboring tasks use.]
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- [ ] **Step 1: Write the failing test**
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```python
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