skills/am-will/planner/SKILL.md
Create comprehensive, phased implementation plans with sprints and atomic tasks. Use when user says: "make a plan", "create a plan", "plan this out", "plan the implementation", "help me plan", "design a plan", "draft a plan", "write a plan", "outline the steps", "break this down into tasks", "what's the plan for", or any similar planning request. Also triggers on explicit "/planner" or "/plan" commands.
npx skillsauth add aiskillstore/marketplace plannerInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Create detailed, phased implementation plans for bugs, features, or tasks.
Investigate the codebase:
Analyze the request:
Before doing ANY documentation search: clarify requirements with user. This will narrow and aid you in finding the right docs.
Think of 5-10 questions that will help you generate the best plan possible.
Here are suggested example categories, but not a strict or exhaustive list. You may ask anything helpful. Use best judgement & prioritize ambiguity and risk reduction:
When the plan involves any external library, API, framework, or service, use the Context7 skill to fetch the latest official docs before drafting tasks. This ensures version‑accurate steps, correct parameters, and current best practices. If no external dependencies apply, skip this phase.
Each sprint must:
Each task must be:
Bad: "Implement Google OAuth" Good:
Save the file
Generate filename from request:
-plan.md suffixExamples:
xyz-bug-plan.mdAFTER it is saved. Identify potential issues & edge cases in plan. Address proactively. Where could smth go wrong? What about the plan is ambiguous? Missing step, dependency, or pitfall?
If any gotchas found, stop & ask up to 3 more questions. (either w/ request_user_input or directly)
Refine the plan if any additional useful info is provided.
# Plan: [Task Name]
**Generated**: [Date]
**Estimated Complexity**: [Low/Medium/High]
## Overview
[Summary of task and approach]
## Prerequisites
- [Dependencies or requirements]
- [Tools, libraries, access needed]
## Sprint 1: [Name]
**Goal**: [What this accomplishes]
**Demo/Validation**:
- [How to run/demo]
- [What to verify]
### Task 1.1: [Name]
- **Location**: [File paths]
- **Description**: [What to do]
- **Dependencies**: [Previous tasks]
- **Acceptance Criteria**:
- [Specific criteria]
- **Validation**:
- [Tests or verification]
### Task 1.2: [Name]
[...]
## Sprint 2: [Name]
[...]
## Testing Strategy
- [How to test]
- [What to verify per sprint]
## Potential Risks & Gotchas
- [What could go wrong]
- [Mitigation strategies]
## Rollback Plan
- [How to undo if needed]
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
Automate HelpDesk tasks via Rube MCP (Composio): list tickets, manage views, use canned responses, and configure custom fields. Always search tools first for current schemas.
testing
Expert Haskell engineer specializing in advanced type systems, pure functional design, and high-reliability software. Use PROACTIVELY for type-level programming, concurrency, and architecture guidance.
tools
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.