013-agile-feature
This Claude Code skill automates the breakdown of software epics into detailed feature documentation through structured conversation. Use it when splitting an epic into individual features, creating feature files with scope and acceptance criteria, or generating documentation for stakeholder or engineering review that derives features from a larger epic initiative.
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/jabrena/cursor-rules-java /tmp/013-agile-feature && cp -r /tmp/013-agile-feature/skills/013-agile-feature ~/.claude/skills/013-agile-featureSKILL.md
# Create Agile Features from an Epic Guide the agent to analyze an epic (from file path or pasted content), hold a structured conversation, and generate one Markdown feature document per agreed feature. **This is an interactive SKILL**. **What is covered in this Skill?** - Epic intake: path or pasted content, confirmation of epic summary - Feature scope: which features to document, technical vs high-level depth - Audience and content mix: stakeholders vs engineering, functional vs technical emphasis - File organization: naming convention and output location - Per-feature refinement: user story links or suggestions, dependencies, success metrics - Optional timeline, release constraints, risks, and technical challenges - Date handling via `date` for Created/Last Updated fields ## Constraints Read the epic before summarizing. Ask questions in order; repeat questions 9–11 for each identified feature. Use the feature template and user-provided naming and paths. - **MANDATORY**: Get current date using terminal command before generating feature files - **MUST**: Read epic content from path or use pasted content—do not invent epic details - **MUST**: Use exact wording from the questions template for numbered questions - **MUST**: Repeat per-feature questions (9–11) for every feature in scope - **MUST**: Wait for user responses before proceeding through the flow ## When to use this skill - Create features from an epic - Split epic into features - Feature files from epic - Derive features from epic ## Workflow 0. **Get current date** Run `date` before generation and use that value for all date placeholders in feature documents. 1. **Analyze epic and gather feature details** Read epic content from file path or pasted input, summarize it for confirmation, then ask the template questions in order. Step constraints: - Use exact wording from the numbered template questions - Repeat per-feature questions (9-11) for every identified feature 2. **Generate one document per feature** Create one Markdown feature file per agreed feature, honoring user-defined naming, output path, audience/depth preferences, and per-feature inputs. 3. **Close with integration guidance** Provide next steps for prioritization, breakdown into user stories, and alignment with epic goals and dependencies. ## Reference For detailed guidance, examples, and constraints, see [references/013-agile-feature.md](references/013-agile-feature.md).
Use when you need to generate a checklist document with Java system prompts, following the embedded template exactly and producing INVENTORY-SKILLS-JAVA.md in the project root. This should trigger for requests such as Create Java system prompts checklist; Generate INVENTORY-SKILLS-JAVA.md; Use @001-skills-inventory. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Use when you need to generate a checklist document with embedded agents inventory, following the embedded template exactly and producing INVENTORY-AGENTS-JAVA.md in the project root. This should trigger for requests such as Create embedded agents inventory checklist; Generate INVENTORY-AGENTS-JAVA.md; Use @002-agents-inventory. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Use when you need to install the embedded robot agents into either .cursor/agents or .claude/agents, selecting the destination interactively and copying the embedded agent definitions from project assets. This should trigger for requests such as Install embedded agents; Bootstrap .cursor/agents; Bootstrap .claude/agents; Copy robot agents. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Guides the creation of agile epics with comprehensive definition including business value, success criteria, and breakdown into user stories. Use when the user wants to create an agile epic, define large bodies of work, break down features into user stories, or document strategic initiatives. This should trigger for requests such as Create an agile epic; Write an epic; I need to create an epic; Define an epic; Epic definition. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Guides the creation of agile user stories and Gherkin feature files. Use when the user wants to create a user story, write acceptance criteria, define Gherkin scenarios, or author BDD feature files. This should trigger for requests such as Create a user story; Write a user story; I need to write a user story. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Use when you need to generate Architecture Decision Records (ADRs) for a Java project through an interactive, conversational process that systematically gathers context, stakeholders, options, and outcomes to produce well-structured ADR documents. This should trigger for requests such as Generate ADR; Create Architecture Decision Record; Document architecture decision; Architecture Decision Record for Java. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Facilitates conversational discovery to create Architectural Decision Records (ADRs) for functional requirements covering CLI, REST/HTTP APIs, or both. Use when the user wants to document command-line or HTTP service architecture, capture functional requirements, create ADRs for CLI or API projects, or design interfaces with documented decisions. This should trigger for requests such as Create ADR for functional requirements; Document functional requirements; Capture functional requirements; Generate functional requirements in an ADR. Part of cursor-rules-java project
Facilitates conversational discovery to create Architectural Decision Records (ADRs) for non-functional requirements using the ISO/IEC 25010:2023 quality model. Use when the user wants to document quality attributes, NFR decisions, security/performance/scalability architecture, or design systems with measurable quality criteria. This should trigger for requests such as Create ADR for Non-functional requirements; Document Non-functional requirements; Capture Non-functional requirements; Generate Non-functional requirements in an ADR. Part of cursor-rules-java project