skills/benderfendor/plan/SKILL.md
Plan lifecycle management for Codex plans stored in $CODEX_HOME/plans (default ~/.codex/plans). Use when a user asks to create, find, read, update, delete, or manage plan documents for implementation work or overview/reference documentation.
npx skillsauth add aiskillstore/marketplace planInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Create and manage plan documents on disk. Plans stored on disk are markdown files with YAML frontmatter and free-form content. When drafting in chat, output only the plan body without frontmatter; add frontmatter only when stashing to disk. Support both implementation plans and overview/reference plans. Only write to the plans folder; do not modify the repository codebase.
$CODEX_HOME/plans or ~/.codex/plans when CODEX_HOME is not set.name and description (single-line values) for on-disk plans.# Plan.<name>.md.scripts/list_plans.py for quick summaries.scripts/read_plan_frontmatter.py to validate a specific plan.README.md, docs/, key modules) to scope requirements.scripts/create_plan.py.name and filename together.Create a plan file (body only; frontmatter is written for you). Run from the plan skill directory:
python ./scripts/create_plan.py \
--name codex-rate-limit-overview \
--description "Scope and update plan for Codex rate limiting" \
--body-file /tmp/plan-body.md
Read frontmatter summary for a plan (run from the plan skill directory):
python ./scripts/read_plan_frontmatter.py ~/.codex/plans/codex-rate-limit-overview.md
List plan summaries (optional filter; run from the plan skill directory):
python ./scripts/list_plans.py --query "rate limit"
Use one of the structures below for the plan body. When drafting, output only the body (no frontmatter). When stashing, prepend this frontmatter:
---
name: <plan-name>
description: <1-line summary>
---
# Plan
<1-3 sentences: intent, scope, and approach.>
## Requirements
- <Requirement 1>
- <Requirement 2>
## Scope
- In:
- Out:
## Files and entry points
- <File/module/entry point 1>
- <File/module/entry point 2>
## Data model / API changes
- <If applicable, describe schema or contract changes>
## Action items
[ ] <Step 1>
[ ] <Step 2>
[ ] <Step 3>
[ ] <Step 4>
[ ] <Step 5>
[ ] <Step 6>
## Testing and validation
- <Tests, commands, or validation steps>
## Risks and edge cases
- <Risk 1>
- <Risk 2>
## Open questions
- <Question 1>
- <Question 2>
# Plan
<1-3 sentences: intent and scope of the overview.>
## Overview
<Describe the system, flow, or architecture at a high level.>
## Diagrams
<Include text or Mermaid diagrams if helpful.>
## Key file references
- <File/module/entry point 1>
- <File/module/entry point 2>
## Auth / routing / behavior notes
- <Capture relevant differences (e.g., auth modes, routing paths).>
## Current status
- <What is live today vs pending work, if known.>
## Action items
- None (overview only).
## Testing and validation
- None (overview only).
## Risks and edge cases
- None (overview only).
## Open questions
- None.
development
Apple Human Interface Guidelines for content display components. Use this skill when the user asks about charts component, collection view, image view, web view, color well, image well, activity view, lockup, data visualization, content display, displaying images, rendering web content, color pickers, or presenting collections of items in Apple apps. Also use when the user says how should I display charts, what's the best way to show images, should I use a web view, how do I build a grid of items, what component shows media, or how do I present a share sheet. Cross-references: hig-foundations for color/typography/accessibility, hig-patterns for data visualization patterns, hig-components-layout for structural containers, hig-platforms for platform-specific component behavior.
tools
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testing
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GraphQL gives clients exactly the data they need - no more, no less. One endpoint, typed schema, introspection. But the flexibility that makes it powerful also makes it dangerous. Without proper controls, clients can craft queries that bring down your server. This skill covers schema design, resolvers, DataLoader for N+1 prevention, federation for microservices, and client integration with Apollo/urql. Key insight: GraphQL is a contract. The schema is the API documentation. Design it carefully.