.agents/skills/writing-plans/SKILL.md
Use when you have a spec or requirements for a multi-step task, before touching code
npx skillsauth add b-mendoza/agent-skills writing-plansInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
Write comprehensive implementation plans assuming the engineer has zero context for our codebase and questionable taste. Document everything they need to know: which files to touch for each task, code, testing, docs they might need to check, how to test it. Give them the whole plan as bite-sized tasks. DRY. YAGNI. TDD. Frequent commits.
Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset or problem domain. Assume they don't know good test design very well.
Announce at start: "I'm using the writing-plans skill to create the implementation plan."
Context: This should be run in a dedicated worktree (created by brainstorming skill).
Save plans to: docs/superpowers/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<feature-name>.md
If the spec covers multiple independent subsystems, it should have been broken into sub-project specs during brainstorming. If it wasn't, suggest breaking this into separate plans — one per subsystem. Each plan should produce working, testable software on its own.
Before defining tasks, map out which files will be created or modified and what each one is responsible for. This is where decomposition decisions get locked in.
This structure informs the task decomposition. Each task should produce self-contained changes that make sense independently.
Each step is one action (2-5 minutes):
Every plan MUST start with this header:
# [Feature Name] Implementation Plan
> **For agentic workers:** REQUIRED SUB-SKILL: Use superpowers:subagent-driven-development (recommended) or superpowers:executing-plans to implement this plan task-by-task. Steps use checkbox (`- [ ]`) syntax for tracking.
**Goal:** [One sentence describing what this builds]
**Architecture:** [2-3 sentences about approach]
**Tech Stack:** [Key technologies/libraries]
---
### Task N: [Component Name]
**Files:**
- Create: `exact/path/to/file.py`
- Modify: `exact/path/to/existing.py:123-145`
- Test: `tests/exact/path/to/test.py`
- [ ] **Step 1: Write the failing test**
```python
def test_specific_behavior():
result = function(input)
assert result == expected
```
- [ ] **Step 2: Run test to verify it fails**
Run: `pytest tests/path/test.py::test_name -v`
Expected: FAIL with "function not defined"
- [ ] **Step 3: Write minimal implementation**
```python
def function(input):
return expected
```
- [ ] **Step 4: Run test to verify it passes**
Run: `pytest tests/path/test.py::test_name -v`
Expected: PASS
- [ ] **Step 5: Commit**
```bash
git add tests/path/test.py src/path/file.py
git commit -m "feat: add specific feature"
```
Every step must contain the actual content an engineer needs. These are plan failures — never write them:
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.
1. Spec coverage: Skim each section/requirement in the spec. Can you point to a task that implements it? List any gaps.
2. Placeholder scan: Search your plan for red flags — any of the patterns from the "No Placeholders" section above. Fix them.
3. Type consistency: Do the types, method signatures, and property names you used in later tasks match what you defined in earlier tasks? A function called clearLayers() in Task 3 but clearFullLayers() in Task 7 is a bug.
If you find issues, fix them inline. No need to re-review — just fix and move on. If you find a spec requirement with no task, add the task.
After saving the plan, offer execution choice:
"Plan complete and saved to docs/superpowers/plans/<filename>.md. Two execution options:
1. Subagent-Driven (recommended) - I dispatch a fresh subagent per task, review between tasks, fast iteration
2. Inline Execution - Execute tasks in this session using executing-plans, batch execution with checkpoints
Which approach?"
If Subagent-Driven chosen:
If Inline Execution chosen:
testing
Diagnoses runtime bugs, crashes, regressions, failing CI/CD pipelines, and underspecified user reports through read-only, evidence-first root-cause analysis with traceable reports and bounded subagent workflows.
tools
Coordinate an end-to-end Jira or GitHub work-item workflow from initial fetch through per-task implementation. Use this skill when the user provides a Jira ticket URL, a GitHub issue URL, owner/repo/issue coordinates, says "work on ticket PROJECT-123", "work on issue owner/repo#42", "resume <work-item-key>", "continue this workflow", or asks for status without naming a specific phase. This top-level coordinator detects the platform from the input, loads the matching playbook just-in-time, keeps SKILL.md as a routing layer, and dispatches execution-heavy work to downstream skills or co-located utility subagents.
testing
Retrieves a Jira ticket or a GitHub issue into docs/<KEY>.md as a read-only, validated Markdown snapshot for downstream workflow phases. Use when a Jira URL, a GitHub issue URL, or owner/repo/number coordinates need the Phase 1 fetch-work-item step. Detects the platform from the input and loads the matching playbook just-in-time.
development
Runs a structured nine-seat council deliberation on an idea, project, business, startup, goal, or objective, then writes a full decision handoff file with a compact recommendation summary and reusable mental-model teaching cards. Use when a user asks to stress-test a decision, get adversarial review, classify a decision as reversible or irreversible, or wants multiple independent perspectives on a course of action.