skills/using-superpowers/SKILL.md
Use when starting any conversation - establishes mandatory workflows for finding and using skills, including loading relevant skills before announcing usage, following brainstorming before coding, and creating TodoWrite todos for checklists
npx skillsauth add crumbgrabber/llm_system_template_agents_skills_patterns_tools_prompts using-superpowersInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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IF A SKILL APPLIES TO YOUR TASK, YOU DO NOT HAVE A CHOICE. YOU MUST USE IT.
This is not negotiable. This is not optional. You cannot rationalize your way out of this. </EXTREMELY-IMPORTANT>
Before responding to ANY user message, you MUST complete this checklist:
Responding WITHOUT completing this checklist = automatic failure.
Follow mandatory workflows. Brainstorming before coding. Check for relevant skills before ANY task.
Execute skills as written
If you catch yourself thinking ANY of these thoughts, STOP. You are rationalizing. Check for and use the skill.
Why: Skills document proven techniques that save time and prevent mistakes. Not using available skills means repeating solved problems and making known errors.
If a skill for your task exists, you must use it or you will fail at your task.
If a skill has a checklist, YOU MUST create TodoWrite todos for EACH item.
Don't:
Why: Checklists without TodoWrite tracking = steps get skipped. Every time. The overhead of TodoWrite is tiny compared to the cost of missing steps.
Before using a skill, announce that you are using it. "I'm using [Skill Name] to [what you're doing]."
Examples:
Why: Transparency helps your human partner understand your process and catch errors early. It also confirms you actually read the skill.
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.
The skill itself tells you which type it is.
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.
Red flags: "Instruction was specific" • "Seems simple" • "Workflow is overkill"
Why: Specific instructions mean clear requirements, which is when workflows matter MOST. Skipping process on "simple" tasks is how simple tasks become complex problems.
Starting any task:
Skill has checklist? TodoWrite for every item.
Finding a relevant skill = mandatory to read and use it. Not optional.
tools
Manage and trigger pre-built Zapier workflows and MCP tool orchestration. Use when user mentions workflows, Zaps, automations, daily digest, research, search, lead tracking, expenses, or asks to "run" any process. Also handles Perplexity-based research and Google Sheets data tracking.
development
Comprehensive spreadsheet creation, editing, and analysis with support for formulas, formatting, data analysis, and visualization. When Claude needs to work with spreadsheets (.xlsx, .xlsm, .csv, .tsv, etc) for: (1) Creating new spreadsheets with formulas and formatting, (2) Reading or analyzing data, (3) Modify existing spreadsheets while preserving formulas, (4) Data analysis and visualization in spreadsheets, or (5) Recalculating formulas
testing
Use when creating new skills, editing existing skills, or verifying skills work before deployment - applies TDD to process documentation by testing with subagents before writing, iterating until bulletproof against rationalization
development
Use when design is complete and you need detailed implementation tasks for engineers with zero codebase context - creates comprehensive implementation plans with exact file paths, complete code examples, and verification steps assuming engineer has minimal domain knowledge