.agents/skills/shape/SKILL.md
Plan the UX and UI for a feature before writing code. Runs a structured discovery interview, then produces a design brief that guides implementation. Use during the planning phase to establish design direction, constraints, and strategy before any code is written.
npx skillsauth add youranreus/note shapeInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
Invoke /impeccable, which contains design principles, anti-patterns, and the Context Gathering Protocol. Follow the protocol before proceeding. If no design context exists yet, you MUST run /impeccable teach first.
Shape the UX and UI for a feature before any code is written. This skill produces a design brief: a structured artifact that guides implementation through discovery, not guesswork.
Scope: Design planning only. This skill does NOT write code. It produces the thinking that makes code good.
Output: A design brief that can be handed off to /impeccable craft, /impeccable, or any other implementation skill.
Most AI-generated UIs fail not because of bad code, but because of skipped thinking. They jump to "here's a card grid" without asking "what is the user trying to accomplish?" This skill inverts that: understand deeply first, so implementation is precise.
Do NOT write any code or make any design decisions during this phase. Your only job is to understand the feature deeply enough to make excellent design decisions later.
Ask these questions in conversation, adapting based on answers. Don't dump them all at once; have a natural dialogue. ask the user directly to clarify what you cannot infer.
After the interview, synthesize everything into a structured design brief. Present it to the user for confirmation before considering this skill complete.
1. Feature Summary (2-3 sentences) What this is, who it's for, what it needs to accomplish.
2. Primary User Action The single most important thing a user should do or understand here.
3. Design Direction
How this should feel. What aesthetic approach fits. Reference the project's design context from .impeccable.md and explain how this feature should express it.
4. Layout Strategy High-level spatial approach: what gets emphasis, what's secondary, how information flows. Describe the visual hierarchy and rhythm, not specific CSS.
5. Key States List every state the feature needs: default, empty, loading, error, success, edge cases. For each, note what the user needs to see and feel.
6. Interaction Model How users interact with this feature. What happens on click, hover, scroll? What feedback do they get? What's the flow from entry to completion?
7. Content Requirements What copy, labels, empty state messages, error messages, and microcopy are needed. Note any dynamic content and its realistic ranges.
8. Recommended References Based on the brief, list which impeccable reference files would be most valuable during implementation (e.g., spatial-design.md for complex layouts, motion-design.md for animated features, interaction-design.md for form-heavy features).
9. Open Questions Anything unresolved that the implementer should resolve during build.
ask the user directly to clarify what you cannot infer. Get explicit confirmation of the brief before finishing. If the user disagrees with any part, revisit the relevant discovery questions.
Once confirmed, the brief is complete. The user can now hand it to /impeccable craft to build the feature, or use it to guide any other implementation approach.
tools
Post-epic review to extract lessons and assess success. Use when the user says "run a retrospective" or "lets retro the epic [epic]"
development
Implements any user intent, requirement, story, bug fix or change request by producing clean working code artifacts that follow the project's existing architecture, patterns and conventions. Use when the user wants to build, fix, tweak, refactor, add or modify any code, component or feature.
testing
Generate end to end automated tests for existing features. Use when the user says "create qa automated tests for [feature]"
development
Execute story implementation following a context filled story spec file. Use when the user says "dev this story [story file]" or "implement the next story in the sprint plan"