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8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jesse Vincent
31fd764285 Update release notes for v3.3.1 writing improvements 2025-10-28 11:10:15 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
e3208f1d93 Apply writing clarity improvements to brainstorming skill
Applied Strunk's "Elements of Style" principles:
- Rule 13: Omitted needless words (removed "already", "genuinely", etc.)
- Rule 11: Converted negative to positive form ("don't ask" → "ask only when")
- Rule 10: Used active voice where appropriate
- Rule 15: Improved parallel construction in lists
- General: Made language more direct and concrete

Changes maintain the skill's functionality while improving readability.
2025-10-28 11:07:55 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
1d21ee842d Refine brainstorming skill for proactive research 2025-10-28 10:59:47 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
aa8c6b4fd0 Clarify personal skill directories for Codex 2025-10-28 10:46:05 -07:00
Jesse Vincent
22f57e7cb0 Improve README and add update checking to bootstrap
- Make README more egalitarian: 'AI coding assistants' vs 'Claude Code'
- Reorganize installation: 'Claude Code (via Plugin Marketplace)' and 'Codex (Experimental)'
- Add update checking to bootstrap with 3-second timeout protection
- Bootstrap now checks if local installation is behind GitHub and suggests 'git pull'
- Network failures or timeouts don't block bootstrap (graceful fallback)
2025-10-28 02:27:32 +00:00
Jesse Vincent
da9f4f1edd Release v3.3.0: Add experimental Codex support
- Restructured Codex files to .codex/ directory
- Updated README with simplified GitHub URL installation
- Added comprehensive release notes for v3.3.0
- Moved superpowers-codex script to .codex/superpowers-codex
- Updated all path references for new structure
- Installation now uses GitHub raw URL for streamlined setup

Codex support includes:
- Unified superpowers-codex script with bootstrap/use-skill/find-skills
- Cross-platform Node.js implementation
- Namespaced skills (superpowers:skill-name)
- Tool mapping (TodoWrite→update_plan, etc.)
- Clean skill display without frontmatter
- Personal skill override system
2025-10-28 02:15:53 +00:00
Jesse Vincent
5831c4dfea Fix AGENTS.md to be minimal one-liner + explanatory text
- AGENTS.md (in user's ~/.codex/) now just tells Codex to run bootstrap
- Bootstrap contains all the critical rules and skill locations
- Updated INSTALL.md to show the simplified AGENTS.md example
- Added explanatory text: 'Superpowers teach you new skills and capabilities'
2025-10-28 01:36:10 +00:00
Jesse Vincent
26487902f8 Add Codex superpowers integration
- Single unified script: superpowers-codex with bootstrap/use-skill/find-skills commands
- Cross-platform Node.js implementation (works on Windows, macOS, Linux)
- Namespaced skills: superpowers:skill-name for superpowers, skill-name for personal
- Personal skills override superpowers skills when names match
- Clean skill display: shows name/description without raw frontmatter
- Helpful context: shows supporting files directory for each skill
- Tool mapping for Codex: TodoWrite→update_plan, subagents→manual fallback, etc.
- Updated terminology: "Superpowers skills" instead of "Core skills"
- Bootstrap integration with AGENTS.md for automatic startup
- Installation guide and bootstrap instructions specific to Codex
2025-10-28 01:19:17 +00:00
9 changed files with 197 additions and 303 deletions

35
.codex/INSTALL.md Normal file
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@@ -0,0 +1,35 @@
# Installing Superpowers for Codex
Quick setup to enable superpowers skills in Codex.
## Installation
1. **Clone superpowers repository**:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.codex/superpowers
cd ~/.codex/superpowers
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git .
```
2. **Create personal skills directory**:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.codex/skills
```
3. **Update ~/.codex/AGENTS.md** to include this superpowers section:
```markdown
## Superpowers System
<EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>
You have superpowers. Superpowers teach you new skills and capabilities. RIGHT NOW run: `~/.codex/superpowers/.codex/superpowers-codex bootstrap` and follow the instructions it returns.
</EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>
```
## Verification
Test the installation:
```bash
~/.codex/superpowers/.codex/superpowers-codex bootstrap
```
You should see skill listings and bootstrap instructions. The system is now ready for use.

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@@ -0,0 +1,33 @@
# Superpowers Bootstrap for Codex
<EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>
You have superpowers.
**Tool for running skills:**
- `~/.codex/superpowers/.codex/superpowers-codex use-skill <skill-name>`
**Tool Mapping for Codex:**
When skills reference tools you don't have, substitute your equivalent tools:
- `TodoWrite``update_plan` (your planning/task tracking tool)
- `Task` tool with subagents → Tell the user that subagents aren't available in Codex yet and you'll do the work the subagent would do
- `Skill` tool → `~/.codex/superpowers/.codex/superpowers-codex use-skill` command (already available)
- `Read`, `Write`, `Edit`, `Bash` → Use your native tools with similar functions
**Skills naming:**
- Superpowers skills: `superpowers:skill-name` (from ~/.codex/superpowers/skills/)
- Personal skills: `skill-name` (from ~/.codex/skills/)
- Personal skills override superpowers skills when names match
**Critical Rules:**
- Before ANY task, review the skills list (shown below)
- If a relevant skill exists, you MUST use `~/.codex/superpowers/.codex/superpowers-codex use-skill` to load it
- Announce: "I've read the [Skill Name] skill and I'm using it to [purpose]"
- Skills with checklists require `update_plan` todos for each item
- NEVER skip mandatory workflows (brainstorming before coding, TDD, systematic debugging)
**Skills location:**
- Superpowers skills: ~/.codex/superpowers/skills/
- Personal skills: ~/.codex/skills/ (override superpowers when names match)
IF A SKILL APPLIES TO YOUR TASK, YOU DO NOT HAVE A CHOICE. YOU MUST USE IT.
</EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>

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@@ -3,14 +3,40 @@
const fs = require('fs');
const path = require('path');
const os = require('os');
const { execSync } = require('child_process');
// Paths
const homeDir = os.homedir();
const superpowersSkillsDir = path.join(homeDir, '.codex', 'superpowers', 'skills');
const personalSkillsDir = path.join(homeDir, '.codex', 'skills');
const bootstrapFile = path.join(homeDir, '.codex', 'superpowers', 'codex', 'superpowers-bootstrap.md');
const bootstrapFile = path.join(homeDir, '.codex', 'superpowers', '.codex', 'superpowers-bootstrap.md');
const superpowersRepoDir = path.join(homeDir, '.codex', 'superpowers');
// Utility functions
function checkForUpdates() {
try {
// Quick check with 3 second timeout to avoid delays if network is down
const output = execSync('git fetch origin && git status --porcelain=v1 --branch', {
cwd: superpowersRepoDir,
timeout: 3000,
encoding: 'utf8',
stdio: 'pipe'
});
// Parse git status output to see if we're behind
const statusLines = output.split('\n');
for (const line of statusLines) {
if (line.startsWith('## ') && line.includes('[behind ')) {
return true; // We're behind remote
}
}
return false; // Up to date
} catch (error) {
// Network down, git error, timeout, etc. - don't block bootstrap
return false;
}
}
function extractFrontmatter(filePath) {
try {
const content = fs.readFileSync(filePath, 'utf8');
@@ -144,6 +170,17 @@ function runBootstrap() {
console.log('# ================================');
console.log('');
// Check for updates (with timeout protection)
if (checkForUpdates()) {
console.log('## Update Available');
console.log('');
console.log('⚠️ Your superpowers installation is behind the latest version.');
console.log('To update, run: `cd ~/.codex/superpowers && git pull`');
console.log('');
console.log('---');
console.log('');
}
// Show the bootstrap instructions
if (fs.existsSync(bootstrapFile)) {
console.log('## Bootstrap Instructions:');

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@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# Superpowers
Give Claude Code superpowers with a comprehensive skills library of proven techniques, patterns, and workflows.
A comprehensive skills library of proven techniques, patterns, and workflows for AI coding assistants.
## What You Get
@@ -21,7 +21,7 @@ Read the introduction: [Superpowers for Claude Code](https://blog.fsck.com/2025/
## Installation
### Via Plugin Marketplace (Recommended)
### Claude Code (via Plugin Marketplace)
```bash
# In Claude Code
@@ -41,6 +41,12 @@ Read the introduction: [Superpowers for Claude Code](https://blog.fsck.com/2025/
# /superpowers:execute-plan - Execute plan in batches
```
### Codex (Experimental)
**Note:** Codex support is experimental and may require refinement based on user feedback.
Tell Codex to fetch https://raw.githubusercontent.com/obra/superpowers/refs/heads/main/.codex/INSTALL.md and follow the instructions.
## Quick Start
### Using Slash Commands

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@@ -1,5 +1,44 @@
# Superpowers Release Notes
## v3.3.1 (2025-10-28)
### Improvements
- Updated `brainstorming` skill to require autonomous recon before questioning, encourage recommendation-driven decisions, and prevent agents from delegating prioritization back to humans.
- Applied writing clarity improvements to `brainstorming` skill following Strunk's "Elements of Style" principles (omitted needless words, converted negative to positive form, improved parallel construction).
### Bug Fixes
- Clarified `writing-skills` guidance so it points to the correct agent-specific personal skill directories (`~/.claude/skills` for Claude Code, `~/.codex/skills` for Codex).
## v3.3.0 (2025-10-28)
### New Features
**Experimental Codex Support**
- Added unified `superpowers-codex` script with bootstrap/use-skill/find-skills commands
- Cross-platform Node.js implementation (works on Windows, macOS, Linux)
- Namespaced skills: `superpowers:skill-name` for superpowers skills, `skill-name` for personal
- Personal skills override superpowers skills when names match
- Clean skill display: shows name/description without raw frontmatter
- Helpful context: shows supporting files directory for each skill
- Tool mapping for Codex: TodoWrite→update_plan, subagents→manual fallback, etc.
- Bootstrap integration with minimal AGENTS.md for automatic startup
- Complete installation guide and bootstrap instructions specific to Codex
**Key differences from Claude Code integration:**
- Single unified script instead of separate tools
- Tool substitution system for Codex-specific equivalents
- Simplified subagent handling (manual work instead of delegation)
- Updated terminology: "Superpowers skills" instead of "Core skills"
### Files Added
- `codex/INSTALL.md` - Installation guide for Codex users
- `codex/superpowers-bootstrap.md` - Bootstrap instructions with Codex adaptations
- `scripts/superpowers-codex` - Unified Node.js executable with all functionality
**Note:** Codex support is experimental. The integration provides core superpowers functionality but may require refinement based on user feedback.
## v3.2.3 (2025-10-23)
### Improvements

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@@ -1,135 +0,0 @@
# Installing Superpowers for Codex
This guide will help you install and set up the Superpowers skill system for Codex.
## Quick Installation
1. **Clone Superpowers to ~/.codex/superpowers/**:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.codex/superpowers
cd ~/.codex/superpowers
git clone https://github.com/obra/superpowers.git .
```
2. **Create personal skills directory**:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.codex/skills
```
3. **Add script paths to your environment** (optional but recommended):
```bash
echo 'export PATH="$HOME/.codex/superpowers/scripts:$PATH"' >> ~/.bashrc
source ~/.bashrc
```
## Directory Structure
After installation, you'll have:
```
~/.codex/
├── superpowers/ # Core superpowers repository
│ ├── skills/ # Core skills (brainstorming, TDD, etc.)
│ ├── scripts/ # find-skills and skill-run tools
│ └── .codex/ # Codex-specific configuration
└── skills/ # Your personal skills (override core)
└── category/
└── skill-name/
└── SKILL.md
```
## Tool Usage
### Finding Skills
```bash
find-skills # List all available skills
find-skills brainstorm # Filter skills by pattern
```
### Running Skills
```bash
skill-run brainstorming # Load a skill
skill-run skills/brainstorming # Same thing
```
## Skill Override System
Personal skills in `~/.codex/skills/` take precedence over core skills:
- **Core skill**: `~/.codex/superpowers/skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md`
- **Personal override**: `~/.codex/skills/brainstorming/SKILL.md` ← This wins
## Bootstrap Setup
The bootstrap system ensures Codex automatically:
1. Reads the superpowers-bootstrap.md on startup
2. Runs find-skills to show available skills
3. Knows how to use the skill tools
See `~/.codex/AGENTS.md` for the bootstrap configuration.
## Troubleshooting
### Scripts not found
```bash
# Add to PATH or use full paths:
~/.codex/superpowers/scripts/find-skills
~/.codex/superpowers/scripts/skill-run
```
### No skills showing
```bash
# Check directory structure:
ls ~/.codex/superpowers/skills/
ls ~/.codex/skills/
```
### Permission errors
```bash
# Make scripts executable:
chmod +x ~/.codex/superpowers/scripts/*
```
## Creating Personal Skills
1. Create directory structure:
```bash
mkdir -p ~/.codex/skills/my-category/my-skill
```
2. Create SKILL.md with frontmatter:
```markdown
---
name: My Skill Name
description: What this skill does
when_to_use: When to apply this skill
---
# My Skill
Skill content here...
```
3. Test it:
```bash
find-skills my-skill
skill-run my-skill
```
## Integration with Codex
Once installed, Codex will automatically have access to:
- **find-skills**: Discover available skills
- **skill-run**: Load and apply skills
- **Mandatory workflows**: Brainstorming before coding, systematic debugging, etc.
- **TodoWrite integration**: Checklist tracking from skills
The bootstrap ensures these tools are available from the first Codex session.
## Compatibility Notes
- Scripts are compatible with bash 3.2+ (works on macOS and Linux)
- No external dependencies required
- Works with existing Codex configuration

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@@ -1,131 +0,0 @@
# Superpowers Bootstrap for Codex
<EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>
You have superpowers.
**Tool path for running skills:**
- superpowers-codex: ~/.codex/superpowers/scripts/superpowers-codex
**Important:** ALL AVAILABLE SKILLS ARE DISCLOSED ABOVE. You have complete visibility into every skill at session start.
**Tool Mapping for Codex:**
When skills reference tools you don't have, substitute your equivalent tools:
- `TodoWrite``update_plan` (your planning/task tracking tool)
- `Task` tool with subagents → `codex --yolo exec "prompt"` (see subagent section below)
- `Skill` tool → `superpowers-codex use-skill` command (already available)
- `Read`, `Write`, `Edit`, `Bash` → Use your native tools with similar functions
</EXTREMELY_IMPORTANT>
## Getting Started with Skills
Two skill libraries work together:
- **Superpowers skills** at `~/.codex/superpowers/skills/` (from superpowers repository)
- **Personal skills** at `~/.codex/skills/` (yours to create and share)
Personal skills shadow superpowers skills when names match.
## Critical Rules
1. **Use skill-run before announcing skill usage.** The bootstrap does NOT read skills for you. Announcing without calling skill-run = lying.
2. **Follow mandatory workflows.** Brainstorming before coding. Check for skills before ANY task.
3. **Create TodoWrite todos for checklists.** Mental tracking = steps get skipped. Every time.
## Mandatory Workflow: Before ANY Task
**1. Review skills list** (completely disclosed above - no searching needed).
**2. If relevant skill exists, YOU MUST use it:**
- Use superpowers-codex: `~/.codex/superpowers/scripts/superpowers-codex use-skill superpowers:skill-name`
- Read ENTIRE output, not just summary
- Announce: "I've read the [Skill Name] skill and I'm using it to [purpose]"
- Follow it exactly
**Don't rationalize:**
- "I remember this skill" - Skills evolve. Read the current version.
- "Bootstrap showed it to me" - That was just the list. Read the actual skill.
- "This doesn't count as a task" - It counts. Find and read skills.
**Why:** Skills document proven techniques that save time and prevent mistakes. Not using available skills means repeating solved problems and making known errors.
## Skills with Checklists
If a skill has a checklist, YOU MUST create TodoWrite todos for EACH item.
**Don't:**
- Work through checklist mentally
- Skip creating todos "to save time"
- Batch multiple items into one todo
- Mark complete without doing them
**Why:** Checklists without TodoWrite tracking = steps get skipped. Every time.
## How to Use skill-run
Every skill has the same structure:
1. **Frontmatter** - `when_to_use` tells you if this skill matches your situation
2. **Overview** - Core principle in 1-2 sentences
3. **Quick Reference** - Scan for your specific pattern
4. **Implementation** - Full details and examples
5. **Supporting files** - Load only when implementing
**Many skills contain rigid rules (TDD, debugging, verification).** Follow them exactly. Don't adapt away the discipline.
**Some skills are flexible patterns (architecture, naming).** Adapt core principles to your context.
## Instructions ≠ Permission to Skip Workflows
Your human partner's specific instructions describe WHAT to do, not HOW.
"Add X", "Fix Y" = the goal, NOT permission to skip brainstorming, TDD, or RED-GREEN-REFACTOR.
## Summary
**Starting any task:**
1. Run find-skills to check for relevant skills
2. If relevant skill exists → Use skill-run with full path
3. Announce you're using it
4. Follow what it says
**Skill has checklist?** TodoWrite for every item.
**Finding a relevant skill = mandatory to read and use it. Not optional.**
## Subagent Orchestration for Codex
When skills reference dispatching subagents or parallel agents, use Codex's subagent capabilities:
**Launch subagents with:**
```bash
codex --yolo exec "your detailed prompt here"
```
**Key guidelines:**
1. **Always quote/escape prompts** - avoid unescaped backticks or `$()` that shell might interpolate
2. **Set timeout for long tasks** - use `timeout_ms: 1800000` (30 minutes) in your bash calls
3. **Parallel execution** - use background jobs (`& ... & wait`) but check individual logs for completion
4. **Lightweight prompts** - subagents inherit CLI defaults, so keep prompts focused and clear
**Example:**
```bash
# Single subagent
codex --yolo exec "Debug the authentication bug in user.py and propose a fix"
# Parallel subagents
codex --yolo exec "Test the API endpoints" &
codex --yolo exec "Review the database schema" &
wait
# Using superpowers skills in subagents
codex --yolo exec "Use superpowers:systematic-debugging to find the root cause of the login failure"
```
**When to use subagents:**
- Skills mention "dispatching parallel agents"
- Tasks that can be broken into independent work
- Code review, testing, or investigation that benefits from fresh perspective
---

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@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ description: Use when creating or developing anything, before writing code or im
Transform rough ideas into fully-formed designs through structured questioning and alternative exploration.
**Core principle:** Ask questions to understand, explore alternatives, present design incrementally for validation.
**Core principle:** Research first, ask targeted questions to fill gaps, explore alternatives, present design incrementally for validation.
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the brainstorming skill to refine your idea into a design."
@@ -17,7 +17,8 @@ Transform rough ideas into fully-formed designs through structured questioning a
| Phase | Key Activities | Tool Usage | Output |
|-------|---------------|------------|--------|
| **1. Understanding** | Ask questions (one at a time) | AskUserQuestion for choices | Purpose, constraints, criteria |
| **Prep: Autonomous Recon** | Inspect repo/docs/commits, form initial model | Native tools (ls, cat, git log, etc.) | Draft understanding to confirm |
| **1. Understanding** | Share findings, ask only for missing context | AskUserQuestion for real decisions | Purpose, constraints, criteria (confirmed) |
| **2. Exploration** | Propose 2-3 approaches | AskUserQuestion for approach selection | Architecture options with trade-offs |
| **3. Design Presentation** | Present in 200-300 word sections | Open-ended questions | Complete design with validation |
| **4. Design Documentation** | Write design document | writing-clearly-and-concisely skill | Design doc in docs/plans/ |
@@ -30,6 +31,7 @@ Copy this checklist to track progress:
```
Brainstorming Progress:
- [ ] Prep: Autonomous Recon (repo/docs/commits reviewed, initial model shared)
- [ ] Phase 1: Understanding (purpose, constraints, criteria gathered)
- [ ] Phase 2: Exploration (2-3 approaches proposed and evaluated)
- [ ] Phase 3: Design Presentation (design validated in sections)
@@ -38,47 +40,53 @@ Brainstorming Progress:
- [ ] Phase 6: Planning Handoff (if implementing)
```
### Phase 1: Understanding
- Check current project state in working directory
- Ask ONE question at a time to refine the idea
- **Use AskUserQuestion tool** when you have multiple choice options
- Gather: Purpose, constraints, success criteria
### Prep: Autonomous Recon
- Use existing tools (file browsing, docs, git history, tests) to understand current project state before asking anything.
- Form your draft model: what problem you're solving, what artifacts exist, and what questions remain.
- Start the conversation by sharing that model: "Based on exploring the project state, docs, working copy, and recent commits, here's how I think this should work…"
- Ask follow-up questions only for information you cannot infer from available materials.
**Example using AskUserQuestion:**
### Phase 1: Understanding
- Share your synthesized understanding first, then invite corrections or additions.
- Ask one focused question at a time, only for gaps you cannot close yourself.
- **Use AskUserQuestion tool** only when you need the human to make a decision among real alternatives.
- Gather: Purpose, constraints, success criteria (confirmed or amended by your partner)
**Example summary + targeted question:**
```
Question: "Where should the authentication data be stored?"
Options:
- "Session storage" (clears on tab close, more secure)
- "Local storage" (persists across sessions, more convenient)
- "Cookies" (works with SSR, compatible with older approach)
Based on the README and yesterday's commit, we're expanding localization to dashboard and billing emails; admin console is still untouched. Only gap I see is whether support responses need localization in this iteration. Did I miss anything important?
```
### Phase 2: Exploration
- Propose 2-3 different approaches
- For each: Core architecture, trade-offs, complexity assessment
- **Use AskUserQuestion tool** to present approaches as structured choices
- Ask your human partner which approach resonates
- For each: Core architecture, trade-offs, complexity assessment, and your recommendation
- **Use AskUserQuestion tool** to present approaches when you truly need a judgement call
- Lead with the option you prefer and explain why; invite disagreement if your partner sees it differently
- Own prioritization: if the repo makes priorities clear, state them and proceed rather than asking
**Example using AskUserQuestion:**
```
Question: "Which architectural approach should we use?"
Options:
- "Direct API calls with retry logic" (simple, synchronous, easier to debug) ← recommended for current scope
- "Event-driven with message queue" (scalable, complex setup, eventual consistency)
- "Direct API calls with retry logic" (simple, synchronous, easier to debug)
- "Hybrid with background jobs" (balanced, moderate complexity, best of both)
I recommend the direct API approach because it matches existing patterns and minimizes new infrastructure. Let me know if you see a blocker that pushes us toward the other options.
```
### Phase 3: Design Presentation
- Present in 200-300 word sections
- Present in coherent sections; use ~200-300 words when introducing new material, shorter summaries once alignment is obvious
- Cover: Architecture, components, data flow, error handling, testing
- Ask after each section: "Does this look right so far?" (open-ended)
- Use open-ended questions here to allow freeform feedback
- Check in at natural breakpoints rather than after every paragraph: "Stop me if this diverges from what you expect."
- Use open-ended questions to allow freeform feedback
- Assume ownership and proceed unless your partner redirects you
### Phase 4: Design Documentation
After design is validated, write it to a permanent document:
After validating the design, write it to a permanent document:
- **File location:** `docs/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-design.md` (use actual date and descriptive topic)
- **RECOMMENDED SUB-SKILL:** Use elements-of-style:writing-clearly-and-concisely (if available) for documentation quality
- **Content:** Capture the design as discussed and validated in Phase 3, organized into the sections that emerged from the conversation
- **Content:** Capture the design as discussed and validated in Phase 3, organized into sections that emerged from the conversation
- Commit the design document to git before proceeding
### Phase 5: Worktree Setup (for implementation)
@@ -100,16 +108,15 @@ When your human partner confirms (any affirmative response):
### When to Use AskUserQuestion Tool
**Use AskUserQuestion for:**
- Phase 1: Clarifying questions with 2-4 clear options
- Phase 2: Architectural approach selection (2-3 alternatives)
- Any decision with distinct, mutually exclusive choices
- When options have clear trade-offs to explain
**Use AskUserQuestion when:**
- You need your partner to make a judgement call among real alternatives
- You have a recommendation and can explain why its your preference
- Prioritization is ambiguous and cannot be inferred from existing materials
**Benefits:**
- Structured presentation of options with descriptions
- Clear trade-off visibility for partner
- Forces explicit choice (prevents vague "maybe both" responses)
**Best practices:**
- State your preferred option and rationale inside the question so your partner can agree or redirect
- If you know the answer from repo/docs, state it as fact and proceed—no question needed
- When priorities are spelled out, acknowledge them and proceed rather than delegating the choice back to your partner
### When to Use Open-Ended Questions
@@ -119,6 +126,8 @@ When your human partner confirms (any affirmative response):
- When partner should describe their own requirements
- When structured options would limit creative input
Frame them to confirm or expand your current understanding rather than reopening settled topics.
**Example decision flow:**
- "What authentication method?" → Use AskUserQuestion (2-4 options)
- "Does this design handle your use case?" → Open-ended (validation)
@@ -150,16 +159,17 @@ digraph revisit_phases {
- Partner questions approach during Phase 3 → Return to Phase 2
- Something doesn't make sense → Go back and clarify
**Don't force forward linearly** when going backward would give better results.
**Avoid forcing forward linearly** when going backward would give better results.
## Key Principles
| Principle | Application |
|-----------|-------------|
| **One question at a time** | Phase 1: Single question per message, use AskUserQuestion for choices |
| **One question at a time** | Phase 1: Single targeted question only for gaps you cant close yourself |
| **Structured choices** | Use AskUserQuestion tool for 2-4 options with trade-offs |
| **YAGNI ruthlessly** | Remove unnecessary features from all designs |
| **Explore alternatives** | Always propose 2-3 approaches before settling |
| **Incremental validation** | Present design in sections, validate each |
| **Flexible progression** | Go backward when needed - flexibility > rigidity |
| **Own the initiative** | Recommend priorities and next steps; ask if you should proceed only when requirements conflict |
| **Announce usage** | State skill usage at start of session |

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@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ description: Use when creating new skills, editing existing skills, or verifying
**Writing skills IS Test-Driven Development applied to process documentation.**
**Personal skills are written to `~/.claude/skills`**
**Personal skills live in agent-specific directories (`~/.claude/skills` for Claude Code, `~/.codex/skills` for Codex)**
You write test cases (pressure scenarios with subagents), watch them fail (baseline behavior), write the skill (documentation), watch tests pass (agents comply), and refactor (close loopholes).