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ClaudeWave
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dev-requirements

The dev-requirements skill guides teams through structured requirement capture and validation for new features using the AI DevKit framework. Use it when initiating features, clarifying product scope, reviewing requirements documentation, or progressing through the first two phases of the development lifecycle, ensuring all material questions about product, UX, architecture, and scope are resolved before proceeding to implementation.

Install in Claude Code
Copy
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/codeaholicguy/ai-devkit /tmp/dev-requirements && cp -r /tmp/dev-requirements/skills/dev-requirements ~/.claude/skills/dev-requirements
Then start a new Claude Code session; the skill loads automatically.

SKILL.md

# Dev Requirements

Run the requirements phases for configured AI docs features. Before making docs or code changes, propose the concrete plan for this phase and wait for user approval unless the user already approved the exact phase plan.

## Phase Contract

1. Run `npx ai-devkit@latest lint` before phase work.
2. If working on a named feature, run `npx ai-devkit@latest lint --feature <name>`.
3. If lint fails because project docs are not initialized, run `npx ai-devkit@latest init -a -e claude --built-in --yes`, then rerun lint.
4. Read existing configured AI docs and keep diffs minimal. Do not assume `docs/ai`; it is only the default docs directory.
5. Ask until every material product, UX, architecture, scope, validation, rollout, contradiction, trade-off, or open question is answered, explicitly deferred, or accepted as a named assumption.
6. Ask one decision at a time, with why it matters, 2-3 viable options when useful, and a recommended answer.
7. Do not create, update, approve, or transition past requirements while material open questions remain.
8. Restate the shared understanding before updating docs or suggesting the next phase.

## New Requirement

Use for Phase 1 or `/new-requirement`.

1. Search AI DevKit memory for relevant past features or conventions with `npx ai-devkit@latest memory search --query "<feature/topic>"`. If unfamiliar, check the `memory` skill first.
2. Clarify feature name in kebab-case, problem, target users, key user stories, scope, non-goals, success criteria, UX, constraints, rollout, and validation.
3. Brainstorm alternatives to confirm this is the right thing to build. Present 2-3 approaches with one-line trade-offs and a recommendation.
4. Store reusable answers after clarification.
5. Use `dev-worktree` to create or resume the active feature workspace with normalized `<name>`.
6. Initialize docs with `npx ai-devkit@latest docs init-feature <name>` from the active worktree/repository and fill the returned paths. Treat those returned paths as authoritative because `paths.docs` may customize the docs directory.
7. Fill requirements doc: problem statement, goals/non-goals, user stories, success criteria, constraints, open questions.
8. Fill design doc: architecture with mermaid diagram, data models, APIs, components, design decisions, security/performance.
9. Fill testing doc: derive scenarios from requirements success criteria and design components/edge cases as `- [ ]` checkboxes, plus mocks/fixtures and coverage target.
10. Use `dev-planning` to create the initial task plan from the requirements, design, and testing docs.

Next: `dev-requirements` review, then `dev-design`.

## Review Requirements

Use for Phase 2.

1. Run `npx ai-devkit@latest lint --feature <name>` and review the requirements doc path it validates. If manual path resolution is unavoidable, first resolve `.ai-devkit.json` `paths.docs`, falling back to `docs/ai`.
2. Check it against the `README.md` template.
3. Search memory for relevant conventions or past patterns.
4. Review each section: problem statement, goals/non-goals, success criteria, user stories, constraints, open questions, template compliance.
5. Resolve every gap, contradiction, ambiguity, open question, or implicit assumption.
6. Brainstorm alternatives for key decisions and trade-offs before accepting the first approach.
7. Update the requirements doc with clarified answers and chosen options.
8. Store reusable clarifications in memory.
9. Summarize what was validated, what was updated, and remaining open items.

Next: `dev-design`. If fundamental gaps remain unresolvable, return to New Requirement.