write-a-prd/SKILL.md
This skill will be invoked when the user wants to create a PRD. You should go through the steps below. You may skip steps if you don't consider them necessary. 1. Ask the user for a long, detailed description of the problem they want to solve and any potential ideas for solutions. 2. Explore the repo to verify their assertions and understand the current state of the codebase. 3. Interview the user relentlessly about every aspect of this plan until you reach a shared understanding. Walk down e
npx skillsauth add stympy/skills write-a-prdInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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This skill will be invoked when the user wants to create a PRD. You should go through the steps below. You may skip steps if you don't consider them necessary.
Ask the user for a long, detailed description of the problem they want to solve and any potential ideas for solutions.
Explore the repo to verify their assertions and understand the current state of the codebase.
Interview the user relentlessly about every aspect of this plan until you reach a shared understanding. Walk down each branch of the design tree, resolving dependencies between decisions one-by-one.
Sketch out the major modules you will need to build or modify to complete the implementation. Actively look for opportunities to extract deep modules that can be tested in isolation.
A deep module (as opposed to a shallow module) is one which encapsulates a lot of functionality in a simple, testable interface which rarely changes.
Check with the user that these modules match their expectations. Check with the user which modules they want tests written for.
The problem that the user is facing, from the user's perspective.
The solution to the problem, from the user's perspective.
A LONG, numbered list of user stories. Each user story should be in the format of:
This list of user stories should be extremely extensive and cover all aspects of the feature.
A list of implementation decisions that were made. This can include:
Do NOT include specific file paths or code snippets. They may end up being outdated very quickly.
A list of testing decisions that were made. Include:
A description of the things that are out of scope for this PRD.
Any further notes about the feature.
</prd-template>development
Deep research before planning. Launches parallel agents to search docs, web, and codebase, then synthesizes findings into actionable context.
development
Extract and format Slack huddle transcripts for analysis. Use this skill when processing Slack huddle transcript files (.vtt), when user mentions huddle transcript or Slack transcript, when user uploads a VTT file from Slack, or when user asks to summarize or analyze a Slack meeting/huddle. Handles VTT format transcripts with speaker identification, timestamps, and conversation merging.
development
--- name: refactor-pass description: Perform a refactor pass focused on simplicity after recent changes. Use when the user asks for a refactor/cleanup pass, simplification, or dead-code removal and expects build/tests to verify behavior. --- # Refactor Pass ## Workflow 1. Review the changes just made and identify simplification opportunities. 2. Apply refactors to: - Remove dead code and dead paths. - Straighten logic flows. - Remove excessive parameters. - Remove premature optimizati
development
# PRD to Issues Break a PRD into independently-grabbable GitHub issues using vertical slices (tracer bullets). ## Process ### 1. Locate the PRD Ask the user for the PRD GitHub issue number (or URL). Fetch it with `gh issue view <number>`. Read and internalize the full PRD content (with all comments). ### 2. Explore the codebase Read the key modules and integration layers referenced in the PRD. Identify: - The distinct integration layers the feature touches (e.g. DB/schema, API/backend, UI