packages/core/src/methodology/packs/planning/task-decomposition/SKILL.md
Breaks down complex software, writing, or research tasks into small, atomic, independently completable units with dependency graphs and milestone breakdowns. Use when the user asks to plan a project, decompose a feature, create subtasks, split up work, or needs help organizing a large piece of work into a step-by-step plan. Triggered by phrases like "break down", "decompose", "where do I start", "too big", "split into tasks", "work breakdown", or "task list".
npx skillsauth add rohitg00/skillkit task-decompositionInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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You are breaking down a complex task into smaller, atomic units. Each unit should be independently completable and verifiable.
If a task feels too big, it is too big. Break it down until each piece is obvious.
A well-decomposed task should take no more than a few hours to complete and have a clear definition of done. Aim for tasks that are small, independent, testable, and clearly scoped.
Break by user-visible functionality (each slice is deployable and testable independently):
Feature: User Registration
Slice 1: Email/password signup — form, validation, account creation
Slice 2: Email verification — send email, verify link, UI state
Slice 3: Social login (OAuth) — Google button, OAuth flow, account link
Break by system layer:
Feature: Order Processing
Layer 1: Data Model — entities, migrations
Layer 2: Data Access — repository, CRUD, queries
Layer 3: Business Logic — service, validation rules
Layer 4: API Endpoints — routes, error handling
Layer 5: Frontend — form, API client, loading/error states
Break by process steps:
Task: Checkout flow
Step 1: Cart validation — stock check, quantities, totals
Step 2: Payment — collect details, validate, process
Step 3: Order creation — record, payment link, inventory update
Step 4: Confirmation — email, success page, invoice
Break by UI or system component:
Task: Dashboard page
Component 1: Header — logo, nav, user menu
Component 2: Stats cards — revenue, orders, customers
Component 3: Chart — sales trend, data fetch/transform
Component 4: Orders table — sort, pagination, row actions
For more detailed worked examples of each technique, see
EXAMPLES.md.
For each decomposed task, define:
## Task: [Brief Title]
**Description:**
[What needs to be done in 1-2 sentences]
**Files to Create/Modify:**
- [ ] path/to/file1.ts
- [ ] path/to/file2.ts
**Steps:**
1. [First specific step]
2. [Second specific step]
3. [Third specific step]
**Done When:**
- [ ] [Success criterion 1]
- [ ] [Success criterion 2]
- [ ] Tests pass
**Dependencies:**
- Requires: [Other task if any]
- Blocks: [What this enables]
Task Graph:
[Data Model] ──┬──▶ [Repository]
│
└──▶ [API Types]
│
[Repository] ──────────▶ [Service]
│
[API Types] ──────────────────┤
▼
[API Endpoints]
Phase 1 (No dependencies):
- Task A: Data model
- Task B: API type definitions
- Task C: UI component skeletons
Phase 2 (Depends on Phase 1):
- Task D: Repository (needs A)
- Task E: API client (needs B)
- Task F: UI logic (needs C)
Phase 3 (Depends on Phase 2):
- Task G: Service (needs D)
- Task H: Connected UI (needs E, F)
For each task, verify:
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development
Applies proven testing patterns — Arrange-Act-Assert (AAA), Given-When-Then, Test Data Builders, Object Mother, parameterized tests, fixtures, spies, and test doubles — to help write maintainable, reliable, and readable test suites. Use when the user asks about writing unit tests, integration tests, or end-to-end tests; structuring test cases or test suites; applying TDD or BDD practices; working with mocks, stubs, spies, or fakes; improving test coverage or reducing flakiness; or needs guidance on test organization, naming conventions, or assertions in frameworks like Jest, Vitest, pytest, or similar.
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Guides the red-green-refactor TDD workflow: write a failing test first, implement the minimum code to make it pass, then refactor while keeping tests green. Use when a user asks to practice TDD, write tests first, follow red-green-refactor, do test-driven development, write failing tests before code, or phrases like 'make the test pass', 'test coverage', or 'unit tests before implementation'.
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Reviews test code to identify and fix common testing anti-patterns including flaky tests, over-mocking, brittle assertions, test interdependency, and hidden test logic. Flags bad patterns, explains the specific defect, and provides corrected implementations. Use when reviewing test code, debugging intermittent or unreliable test failures, or when the user mentions flaky tests, test smells, brittle tests, test isolation issues, mock overuse, slow tests, or test maintenance problems.