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a17aaaef3a |
@@ -9,7 +9,7 @@
|
||||
{
|
||||
"name": "superpowers",
|
||||
"description": "Core skills library for Claude Code: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.1",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.0",
|
||||
"source": "./",
|
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"author": {
|
||||
"name": "Jesse Vincent",
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
|
||||
{
|
||||
"name": "superpowers",
|
||||
"description": "Core skills library for Claude Code: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.1",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.0",
|
||||
"author": {
|
||||
"name": "Jesse Vincent",
|
||||
"email": "jesse@fsck.com"
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
|
||||
{
|
||||
"name": "superpowers",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.1",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.0",
|
||||
"description": "An agentic skills framework & software development methodology that works: planning, TDD, debugging, and collaboration workflows.",
|
||||
"author": {
|
||||
"name": "Jesse Vincent",
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
|
||||
"name": "superpowers",
|
||||
"displayName": "Superpowers",
|
||||
"description": "Core skills library: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.1",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.0",
|
||||
"author": {
|
||||
"name": "Jesse Vincent",
|
||||
"email": "jesse@fsck.com"
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
|
||||
{
|
||||
"name": "superpowers",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.1",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.0",
|
||||
"description": "An agentic skills framework and software development methodology.",
|
||||
"author": {
|
||||
"name": "Jesse Vincent",
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -1,16 +1,5 @@
|
||||
# Superpowers Release Notes
|
||||
|
||||
## v6.1.1 (2026-07-02)
|
||||
|
||||
### Codex
|
||||
|
||||
- **Codex no longer re-registers the Claude SessionStart hook.** v6.1.0 removed the Codex hook config and its manifest `hooks` pointer, meaning to stop Codex from installing a SessionStart hook — but with no `hooks` field, Codex fell back to auto-discovering `hooks/hooks.json`, the Claude Code SessionStart hook that the marketplace ships from the repo root, and re-registered it along with its install-time trust prompt. The Codex manifest now declares an explicit empty hooks object (`hooks: {}`), which Codex reads as "no hooks" instead of reaching the auto-discovery fallback. An absent field, `[]`, and an empty inline list all collapse back to the fallback, so the value has to be exactly `{}`.
|
||||
- **Removed orphaned Codex session-start dead code.** `hooks/session-start-codex` had no caller once the Codex hook config was deleted, so it and its redundant test cases are gone. The worked shell-hook example in `docs/porting-to-a-new-harness.md` moves from Codex — now native skill discovery with no session-start hook — to Cursor, a live shell-hook harness, and the stale `hooks-codex.json` pointer in `docs/windows/polyglot-hooks.md` is corrected. The Codex plugin category is also fixed to "Developer Tools".
|
||||
|
||||
### Packaging
|
||||
|
||||
- **New `package-codex-plugin.sh` for building the Codex portal package.** A maintainer script produces a deterministic Codex "portal" archive — `.zip` by default, `tar.gz` on request — that normalizes entry timestamps, preserves executable modes, verifies every packaged skill ships its OpenAI metadata, includes the app and composer icons, and refuses to run against a dirty worktree. The packaged manifest keeps the source `hooks: {}` object so a portal-installed plugin avoids the same SessionStart auto-discovery, and the script can rebuild a byte-identical archive from a saved metadata source. Covered by a new test suite.
|
||||
|
||||
## v6.1.0 (2026-06-30)
|
||||
|
||||
### Lower Per-Session Token Cost
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
|
||||
{
|
||||
"name": "superpowers",
|
||||
"description": "Core skills library: TDD, debugging, collaboration patterns, and proven techniques",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.1",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.0",
|
||||
"contextFileName": "GEMINI.md"
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
|
||||
{
|
||||
"name": "superpowers",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.1",
|
||||
"version": "6.1.0",
|
||||
"description": "Superpowers skills and runtime bootstrap for coding agents",
|
||||
"type": "module",
|
||||
"main": ".opencode/plugins/superpowers.js",
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -77,7 +77,6 @@ digraph brainstorming {
|
||||
- Propose 2-3 different approaches with trade-offs
|
||||
- Present options conversationally with your recommendation and reasoning
|
||||
- Lead with your recommended option and explain why
|
||||
- YAGNI ruthlessly - remove unnecessary features from every approach and design
|
||||
|
||||
**Presenting the design:**
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -131,6 +130,15 @@ Wait for the user's response. If they request changes, make them and re-run the
|
||||
- Invoke the writing-plans skill to create a detailed implementation plan
|
||||
- Do NOT invoke any other skill. writing-plans is the next step.
|
||||
|
||||
## Key Principles
|
||||
|
||||
- **One question at a time** - Don't overwhelm with multiple questions
|
||||
- **Multiple choice preferred** - Easier to answer than open-ended when possible
|
||||
- **YAGNI ruthlessly** - Remove unnecessary features from all designs
|
||||
- **Explore alternatives** - Always propose 2-3 approaches before settling
|
||||
- **Incremental validation** - Present design, get approval before moving on
|
||||
- **Be flexible** - Go back and clarify when something doesn't make sense
|
||||
|
||||
## Visual Companion
|
||||
|
||||
A browser-based companion for showing mockups, diagrams, and visual options during brainstorming. Available as a tool — not a mode. Accepting the companion means it's available for questions that benefit from visual treatment; it does NOT mean every question goes through the browser.
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -158,6 +158,15 @@ Agent 3 → Fix tool-approval-race-conditions.test.ts
|
||||
|
||||
**Integration:** All fixes independent, no conflicts, full suite green
|
||||
|
||||
**Time saved:** 3 problems solved in parallel vs sequentially
|
||||
|
||||
## Key Benefits
|
||||
|
||||
1. **Parallelization** - Multiple investigations happen simultaneously
|
||||
2. **Focus** - Each agent has narrow scope, less context to track
|
||||
3. **Independence** - Agents don't interfere with each other
|
||||
4. **Speed** - 3 problems solved in time of 1
|
||||
|
||||
## Verification
|
||||
|
||||
After agents return:
|
||||
@@ -165,3 +174,12 @@ After agents return:
|
||||
2. **Check for conflicts** - Did agents edit same code?
|
||||
3. **Run full suite** - Verify all fixes work together
|
||||
4. **Spot check** - Agents can make systematic errors
|
||||
|
||||
## Real-World Impact
|
||||
|
||||
From debugging session (2025-10-03):
|
||||
- 6 failures across 3 files
|
||||
- 3 agents dispatched in parallel
|
||||
- All investigations completed concurrently
|
||||
- All fixes integrated successfully
|
||||
- Zero conflicts between agent changes
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ Load plan, review critically, execute all tasks, report when complete.
|
||||
|
||||
**Announce at start:** "I'm using the executing-plans skill to implement this plan."
|
||||
|
||||
**Note:** Tell your human partner that Superpowers works much better with access to subagents (Claude Code, Codex CLI, Codex App, and Copilot CLI all qualify; see the per-platform tool refs in `../using-superpowers/references/`). If subagents are available, use superpowers:subagent-driven-development instead of this skill.
|
||||
**Note:** Tell your human partner that Superpowers works much better with access to subagents. The quality of its work will be significantly higher if run on a platform with subagent support (Claude Code, Codex CLI, Codex App, and Copilot CLI all qualify; see the per-platform tool refs in `../using-superpowers/references/`). If subagents are available, use superpowers:subagent-driven-development instead of this skill.
|
||||
|
||||
## The Process
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -203,3 +203,11 @@ You understand 1,2,3,6. Unclear on 4,5.
|
||||
## GitHub Thread Replies
|
||||
|
||||
When replying to inline review comments on GitHub, reply in the comment thread (`gh api repos/{owner}/{repo}/pulls/{pr}/comments/{id}/replies`), not as a top-level PR comment.
|
||||
|
||||
## The Bottom Line
|
||||
|
||||
**External feedback = suggestions to evaluate, not orders to follow.**
|
||||
|
||||
Verify. Question. Then implement.
|
||||
|
||||
No performative agreement. Technical rigor always.
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -5,7 +5,7 @@ description: Use when completing tasks, implementing major features, or before m
|
||||
|
||||
# Requesting Code Review
|
||||
|
||||
Dispatch a code reviewer subagent to catch issues before they cascade. The reviewer gets precisely crafted context for evaluation — never your session's history.
|
||||
Dispatch a code reviewer subagent to catch issues before they cascade. The reviewer gets precisely crafted context for evaluation — never your session's history. This keeps the reviewer focused on the work product, not your thought process, and preserves your own context for continued work.
|
||||
|
||||
**Core principle:** Review early, review often.
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -72,6 +72,21 @@ You: [Fix progress indicators]
|
||||
[Continue to Task 3]
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
## Integration with Workflows
|
||||
|
||||
**Subagent-Driven Development:**
|
||||
- Review after EACH task
|
||||
- Catch issues before they compound
|
||||
- Fix before moving to next task
|
||||
|
||||
**Executing Plans:**
|
||||
- Review after each task or at natural checkpoints
|
||||
- Get feedback, apply, continue
|
||||
|
||||
**Ad-Hoc Development:**
|
||||
- Review before merge
|
||||
- Review when stuck
|
||||
|
||||
## Red Flags
|
||||
|
||||
**Never:**
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -332,6 +332,38 @@ Final reviewer: All requirements met, ready to merge
|
||||
Done!
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
## Advantages
|
||||
|
||||
**vs. Manual execution:**
|
||||
- Subagents follow TDD naturally
|
||||
- Fresh context per task (no confusion)
|
||||
- Parallel-safe (subagents don't interfere)
|
||||
- Subagent can ask questions (before AND during work)
|
||||
|
||||
**vs. Executing Plans:**
|
||||
- Same session (no handoff)
|
||||
- Continuous progress (no waiting)
|
||||
- Review checkpoints automatic
|
||||
|
||||
**Efficiency gains:**
|
||||
- Controller curates exactly what context is needed; bulk artifacts move
|
||||
as files, not pasted text
|
||||
- Subagent gets complete information upfront
|
||||
- Questions surfaced before work begins (not after)
|
||||
|
||||
**Quality gates:**
|
||||
- Self-review catches issues before handoff
|
||||
- Task review carries two verdicts: spec compliance and code quality
|
||||
- Review loops ensure fixes actually work
|
||||
- Spec compliance prevents over/under-building
|
||||
- Code quality ensures implementation is well-built
|
||||
|
||||
**Cost:**
|
||||
- More subagent invocations (implementer + reviewer per task)
|
||||
- Controller does more prep work (extracting all tasks upfront)
|
||||
- Review loops add iterations
|
||||
- But catches issues early (cheaper than debugging later)
|
||||
|
||||
## Red Flags
|
||||
|
||||
**Never:**
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -7,6 +7,8 @@ description: Use when encountering any bug, test failure, or unexpected behavior
|
||||
|
||||
## Overview
|
||||
|
||||
Random fixes waste time and create new bugs. Quick patches mask underlying issues.
|
||||
|
||||
**Core principle:** ALWAYS find root cause before attempting fixes. Symptom fixes are failure.
|
||||
|
||||
**Violating the letter of this process is violating the spirit of debugging.**
|
||||
@@ -284,3 +286,11 @@ These techniques are part of systematic debugging and available in this director
|
||||
**Related skills:**
|
||||
- **superpowers:test-driven-development** - For creating failing test case (Phase 4, Step 1)
|
||||
- **superpowers:verification-before-completion** - Verify fix worked before claiming success
|
||||
|
||||
## Real-World Impact
|
||||
|
||||
From debugging sessions:
|
||||
- Systematic approach: 15-30 minutes to fix
|
||||
- Random fixes approach: 2-3 hours of thrashing
|
||||
- First-time fix rate: 95% vs 40%
|
||||
- New bugs introduced: Near zero vs common
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -203,6 +203,56 @@ Next failing test for next feature.
|
||||
| **Clear** | Name describes behavior | `test('test1')` |
|
||||
| **Shows intent** | Demonstrates desired API | Obscures what code should do |
|
||||
|
||||
## Why Order Matters
|
||||
|
||||
**"I'll write tests after to verify it works"**
|
||||
|
||||
Tests written after code pass immediately. Passing immediately proves nothing:
|
||||
- Might test wrong thing
|
||||
- Might test implementation, not behavior
|
||||
- Might miss edge cases you forgot
|
||||
- You never saw it catch the bug
|
||||
|
||||
Test-first forces you to see the test fail, proving it actually tests something.
|
||||
|
||||
**"I already manually tested all the edge cases"**
|
||||
|
||||
Manual testing is ad-hoc. You think you tested everything but:
|
||||
- No record of what you tested
|
||||
- Can't re-run when code changes
|
||||
- Easy to forget cases under pressure
|
||||
- "It worked when I tried it" ≠ comprehensive
|
||||
|
||||
Automated tests are systematic. They run the same way every time.
|
||||
|
||||
**"Deleting X hours of work is wasteful"**
|
||||
|
||||
Sunk cost fallacy. The time is already gone. Your choice now:
|
||||
- Delete and rewrite with TDD (X more hours, high confidence)
|
||||
- Keep it and add tests after (30 min, low confidence, likely bugs)
|
||||
|
||||
The "waste" is keeping code you can't trust. Working code without real tests is technical debt.
|
||||
|
||||
**"TDD is dogmatic, being pragmatic means adapting"**
|
||||
|
||||
TDD IS pragmatic:
|
||||
- Finds bugs before commit (faster than debugging after)
|
||||
- Prevents regressions (tests catch breaks immediately)
|
||||
- Documents behavior (tests show how to use code)
|
||||
- Enables refactoring (change freely, tests catch breaks)
|
||||
|
||||
"Pragmatic" shortcuts = debugging in production = slower.
|
||||
|
||||
**"Tests after achieve the same goals - it's spirit not ritual"**
|
||||
|
||||
No. Tests-after answer "What does this do?" Tests-first answer "What should this do?"
|
||||
|
||||
Tests-after are biased by your implementation. You test what you built, not what's required. You verify remembered edge cases, not discovered ones.
|
||||
|
||||
Tests-first force edge case discovery before implementing. Tests-after verify you remembered everything (you didn't).
|
||||
|
||||
30 minutes of tests after ≠ TDD. You get coverage, lose proof tests work.
|
||||
|
||||
## Common Rationalizations
|
||||
|
||||
| Excuse | Reality |
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -156,12 +156,47 @@ Ready to implement <feature-name>
|
||||
| Tests fail during baseline | Report failures + ask |
|
||||
| No package.json/Cargo.toml | Skip dependency install |
|
||||
|
||||
## Common Rationalizations
|
||||
## Common Mistakes
|
||||
|
||||
| Excuse | Reality |
|
||||
|--------|---------|
|
||||
| "I'm obviously not in a worktree — no need to check" | Run Step 0. Harness-created isolation and submodules both fool eyeballing; the detection commands settle it. |
|
||||
| "`git worktree add` is quicker than hunting for a native tool" | A native tool (e.g. `EnterWorktree`) owns placement, branching, and cleanup. Bypassing it is the #1 mistake — it creates phantom state your harness can't see or manage. |
|
||||
| "The worktree directory is surely ignored already" | Run `git check-ignore`. An unignored worktree directory commits the whole tree into the repo. |
|
||||
| "Any directory name works" | Explicit instructions beat an existing project-local directory, which beats the `.worktrees/` default. |
|
||||
| "The workspace is fresh — baseline tests can wait" | A dirty baseline makes every later failure ambiguous. Run the tests now; proceeding past failures is your human partner's call. |
|
||||
### Fighting the harness
|
||||
|
||||
- **Problem:** Using `git worktree add` when the platform already provides isolation
|
||||
- **Fix:** Step 0 detects existing isolation. Step 1a defers to native tools.
|
||||
|
||||
### Skipping detection
|
||||
|
||||
- **Problem:** Creating a nested worktree inside an existing one
|
||||
- **Fix:** Always run Step 0 before creating anything
|
||||
|
||||
### Skipping ignore verification
|
||||
|
||||
- **Problem:** Worktree contents get tracked, pollute git status
|
||||
- **Fix:** Always use `git check-ignore` before creating project-local worktree
|
||||
|
||||
### Assuming directory location
|
||||
|
||||
- **Problem:** Creates inconsistency, violates project conventions
|
||||
- **Fix:** Follow priority: explicit instructions > existing project-local directory > default
|
||||
|
||||
### Proceeding with failing tests
|
||||
|
||||
- **Problem:** Can't distinguish new bugs from pre-existing issues
|
||||
- **Fix:** Report failures, get explicit permission to proceed
|
||||
|
||||
## Red Flags
|
||||
|
||||
**Never:**
|
||||
- Create a worktree when Step 0 detects existing isolation
|
||||
- Use `git worktree add` when you have a native worktree tool (e.g., `EnterWorktree`). This is the #1 mistake — if you have it, use it.
|
||||
- Skip Step 1a by jumping straight to Step 1b's git commands
|
||||
- Create worktree without verifying it's ignored (project-local)
|
||||
- Skip baseline test verification
|
||||
- Proceed with failing tests without asking
|
||||
|
||||
**Always:**
|
||||
- Run Step 0 detection first
|
||||
- Prefer native tools over git fallback
|
||||
- Follow directory priority: explicit instructions > existing project-local directory > default
|
||||
- Verify directory is ignored for project-local
|
||||
- Auto-detect and run project setup
|
||||
- Verify clean test baseline
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -7,6 +7,8 @@ description: Use when about to claim work is complete, fixed, or passing, before
|
||||
|
||||
## Overview
|
||||
|
||||
Claiming work is complete without verification is dishonesty, not efficiency.
|
||||
|
||||
**Core principle:** Evidence before claims, always.
|
||||
|
||||
**Violating the letter of this rule is violating the spirit of this rule.**
|
||||
@@ -103,6 +105,15 @@ Skip any step = lying, not verifying
|
||||
❌ Trust agent report
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
## Why This Matters
|
||||
|
||||
From 24 failure memories:
|
||||
- your human partner said "I don't believe you" - trust broken
|
||||
- Undefined functions shipped - would crash
|
||||
- Missing requirements shipped - incomplete features
|
||||
- Time wasted on false completion → redirect → rework
|
||||
- Violates: "Honesty is a core value. If you lie, you'll be replaced."
|
||||
|
||||
## When To Apply
|
||||
|
||||
**ALWAYS before:**
|
||||
@@ -118,3 +129,11 @@ Skip any step = lying, not verifying
|
||||
- Paraphrases and synonyms
|
||||
- Implications of success
|
||||
- ANY communication suggesting completion/correctness
|
||||
|
||||
## The Bottom Line
|
||||
|
||||
**No shortcuts for verification.**
|
||||
|
||||
Run the command. Read the output. THEN claim the result.
|
||||
|
||||
This is non-negotiable.
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -135,6 +135,12 @@ Every step must contain the actual content an engineer needs. These are **plan f
|
||||
- Steps that describe what to do without showing how (code blocks required for code steps)
|
||||
- References to types, functions, or methods not defined in any task
|
||||
|
||||
## Remember
|
||||
- Exact file paths always
|
||||
- Complete code in every step — if a step changes code, show the code
|
||||
- Exact commands with expected output
|
||||
- DRY, YAGNI, TDD, frequent commits
|
||||
|
||||
## Self-Review
|
||||
|
||||
After writing the complete plan, look at the spec with fresh eyes and check the plan against it. This is a checklist you run yourself — not a subagent dispatch.
|
||||
|
||||
@@ -677,3 +677,13 @@ How future agents find your skill:
|
||||
6. **Loads example** (only when implementing)
|
||||
|
||||
**Optimize for this flow** - put searchable terms early and often.
|
||||
|
||||
## The Bottom Line
|
||||
|
||||
**Creating skills IS TDD for process documentation.**
|
||||
|
||||
Same Iron Law: No skill without failing test first.
|
||||
Same cycle: RED (baseline) → GREEN (write skill) → REFACTOR (close loopholes).
|
||||
Same benefits: Better quality, fewer surprises, bulletproof results.
|
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If you follow TDD for code, follow it for skills. It's the same discipline applied to documentation.
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Reference in New Issue
Block a user