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Skill506 estrellas del repoactualizado 2d ago

writing-plans

This skill converts approved specifications or requirements into detailed, step-by-step implementation plans that assume zero prior context about the codebase. It structures work into bite-sized tasks (2-5 minutes each) with exact file paths, complete code snippets, and verification steps, while identifying scope boundaries, compatibility constraints, and escalation triggers. Use this before any implementation begins when you have formal requirements or a spec that needs to become executable work.

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git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/GanyuanRan/Aegis /tmp/writing-plans && cp -r /tmp/writing-plans/skills/writing-plans ~/.claude/skills/writing-plans
Después abre una sesión nueva de Claude Code; el skill carga automáticamente.

SKILL.md

# Execute

→ Have an existing parent plan/spec and a tiny execution slice? → **Use Planless Slice Lane.**
  1. Emit a compact Slice Card: goal, parent plan/spec, files, boundary, verification, stop
  2. Update the parent workstream checkpoint/evidence/drift state if persistent state is needed
  3. Do not save a new plan for the micro-slice
→ Have approved spec/requirements for a new workstream or an escalation trigger? → **Write implementation plan. Assume engineer has zero context.**
  1. Scope check: fact/assumption/unknown, baseline, Ripple Signal Triage, compatibility boundary, dual-track needs
  2. File map: what files created/modified, clear boundaries, follow existing patterns
  3. Bite-sized tasks (2-5 min each): exact file paths, complete code, exact commands, expected output
  4. Self-review: spec coverage, placeholders, type consistency, compatibility, verification, dual-track
  5. Save → offer execution choice (subagent-driven or inline)
→ Plan must answer: problem, baseline, files, compat, verification, risks, retirement.
→ Escalate from Planless Slice Lane to a durable plan when the slice adds a new owner, contract, schema, public API, architecture boundary, migration, persistence, security/permission, distribution/release surface, or unclear verification boundary.

# Writing Plans

## Overview

Write comprehensive implementation plans assuming the engineer has zero context for our codebase and questionable taste. Document everything they need to know: which files to touch for each task, code, testing, docs they might need to check, how to test it. Give them the whole plan as bite-sized tasks. DRY. YAGNI. TDD. Frequent commits.

Assume they are a skilled developer, but know almost nothing about our toolset or problem domain. Assume they don't know good test design very well.

This skill is the canonical planning workflow for multi-step implementation work. Use it to convert approved specs or requirements into plans that are executable, testable, impact-aware, and bounded by compatibility and authority constraints.

**Announce at start:** "I'm using the writing-plans skill to create the implementation plan."

**Context:** This should be run in a dedicated worktree (created by brainstorming skill).

**Input:** approved requirements, a Spec Brief, or a Design Spec.

**Save plans to:** `docs/aegis/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-<feature-name>.md`
Plan always goes to `plans/` — never to `work/`.
(User preferences for plan location override this default.)

Exception: if an existing parent plan/spec already owns the current tiny
execution slice, use `Planless Slice Lane`. Do not save a new plan. Emit a
compact `Slice Card` in the conversation or the active long-task checkpoint
instead:

```text
Slice Card:
- Goal:
- Parent plan/spec:
- Files:
- Boundary:
- Verification:
- Stop:
```

If `docs/aegis/` does not exist and configured Aegis workspace support is
available, initialize the target project first:

```bash
python <aegis-workspace-helper> init --root <target-project-root>
```

If installed Aegis workspace support is unavailable, initialize the workspace manually:
  1. Create `docs/aegis/README.md` and `docs/aegis/INDEX.md`
  2. Create `docs/aegis/BASELINE-GOVERNANCE.md` from template
  3. If the project has code, create `docs/aegis/baseline/YYYY-MM-DD-initial-baseline.md`
Then save the plan and append to `docs/aegis/INDEX.md`. Prefer:

```bash
python <aegis-workspace-helper> append-index --root <target-project-root> --path docs/aegis/plans/<filename>.md --kind plan --title "<title>"
python <aegis-workspace-helper> check --root <target-project-root>
```

## Scope Check

If the input is a Spec Brief, keep the plan scoped to the pinned
what/why/acceptance and do not expand into a formal design unless new
architecture, contract, migration, or cross-module uncertainty appears.

Compact output contract before writing the plan: `Plan Basis`,
`BaselineUsageDraft`, `Files`, `Compatibility`, `Architecture Integrity Lens`,
`Plan Pressure Test`, `Plan-Time Complexity Check`, `Tasks`, `Risks`, and
`Retirement`. Expand only where the approved scope, risk, or verification
surface requires it.

Use a compact `BaselineUsageDraft` whenever the plan depends on specific
baseline docs or current-authority refs:

```text
BaselineUsageDraft:
- Required baseline refs:
- Delivered context refs:
- Acknowledged before plan refs:
- Cited in plan refs:
- Missing refs:
- Decision: continue | needs-baseline-readback | needs-verification | pause-for-user | blocked
```

`Delivered context refs` is optional host-projected bookkeeping only. It is not
authoritative proof that a host injected or the model internally consumed a
context payload. The artifact exists to make baseline/context attention drift
visible before and during planning.

Use the `Architecture Integrity Lens` before task decomposition when an
executable plan may still encode responsibility overlap, a wrong canonical
owner, a caller-side fallback, a stale path carrying real logic, or a missed
higher-level owner / contract / source-of-truth simplification. Keep it compact:
invariant, canonical owner / contract, responsibility overlap, higher-level
simplification, retirement / falsifier, and verdict.

Use a compact `Plan Pressure Test` before task decomposition:

```text
Plan Pressure Test:
- Owner / contract / retirement:
- Architecture integrity / higher-level path:
- Verification scope:
- Task executability:
- Pressure result: proceed | revise plan | return to design
```

The pressure test is not an approval gate and should not redesign an approved
spec without cause. It exists to catch owner / contract / retirement risk,
missing verification, and tasks that are too vague to execute safely.

Use a compact `Plan-Time Complexity Check` before writing task steps when the
plan changes maintained source files, core owners, handlers, routers, managers,
shared utilities, adapters, or fallback paths:

Use `using-aegis/references/complexity-governance.md` for the sha