implement
The implement skill executes a standard workflow for ad-hoc code changes: it loads code style rules, applies the requested modification, runs verification checks, previews user-facing changes, and executes finalization for QA and commit. Use this skill when the user requests direct implementation without a governing plan or improvements backlog, or when they explicitly ask to "just implement" or "implement directly".
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/tobihagemann/turbo /tmp/implement && cp -r /tmp/implement/claude/skills/implement ~/.claude/skills/implementSKILL.md
# Implement Standard implementation flow: load style rules, make the change, run post-implementation QA. ## Task Tracking At the start, use `TaskCreate` to create a task for each step: 1. Run `/code-style` skill 2. Load task-specific skills 3. Make the change 4. Run verification 5. Run `/preview` skill for UI/UX changes 6. Run `/finalize` skill ## Step 1: Run `/code-style` Skill Run the `/code-style` skill to load mirror, reuse, and symmetry rules before editing. ## Step 2: Load Task-Specific Skills Scan the work for types that match available skills, matching against the richest context available: a plan's **Implementation Steps** if a plan is in conversation context, otherwise the user request, a prior skill's task description, or an improvement entry. For each unambiguous match, run the skill via the Skill tool. For example, if the work includes "add a Drizzle migration" and a skill exists whose triggers reference Drizzle migrations, load it. If a work type has no matching skill trigger, do not load a generic skill. If unsure, do not load. ## Step 3: Make the Change Apply the change described by the current context — the user request, a prior skill's task description, or an improvement entry. Keep the edit scoped to what the context describes. If the scope balloons beyond what the context specified, stop and confirm scope before continuing. ## Step 4: Run Verification If a Verification section is in conversation context (e.g., from a plan file), execute the commands, smoke checks, or MCP tool invocations it specifies. If a check fails, run the `/investigate` skill. If a check is blocked by a dependency, unclear requirement, or environmental issue, use `AskUserQuestion` to surface the blocker and let the user choose how to proceed. If no Verification section is in context, skip this step. ## Step 5: Run `/preview` Skill for UI/UX Changes If the change touches a user-facing surface (UI components, styles, templates, markup, user-facing routes or screens), run the `/preview` skill so the user can try it firsthand before QA. When it is unclear whether the change is user-facing, use `AskUserQuestion` to ask whether to preview rather than skipping silently. Skip this step for changes with no user-facing surface (backend-only, CLI, library, build or config). ## Step 6: Run `/finalize` Skill Run the `/finalize` skill. Then use the TaskList tool and proceed to any remaining task. ## Rules - Defer `git commit`, `git push`, and PR creation to Step 6. - Don't reference `.turbo/` content (filenames, requirement IDs, shell references, headings) in code or comments. `.turbo/` is gitignored, so these references would be opaque to anyone reading without local copies.
For each reviewer question on a PR, recall implementation reasoning and compose a raw answer. Use when the user asks to \"answer reviewer questions\", \"draft answers to PR questions\", or \"explain reviewer questions\".
Apply findings by making the suggested code changes. Applies accepted verdicts, escalates ambiguous findings to the user, and offers to note genuine improvements for later. Use when the user asks to \"apply findings\", \"apply fixes\", \"apply suggestions\", \"apply accepted findings\", \"fix the findings\", or \"apply the review results\".
Project-wide health audit pipeline that fans out to all analysis skills in parallel, evaluates findings, and produces a unified report at .turbo/audit.md. Use when the user asks to \"audit the project\", \"run a full audit\", \"project health check\", \"audit my code\", \"codebase audit\", or \"comprehensive review\".
Shared changelog conventions and formatting rules referenced by $create-changelog and $update-changelog. Not typically invoked directly.
Enforce mirror, reuse, and symmetry principles to keep new code consistent with surrounding code. Use when writing new code in an existing codebase, adding new features, refactoring, or making any code changes.
Run autonomous task execution using the codex CLI. Use when the user asks to \"codex exec\", \"run codex exec\", \"execute a task with codex\", or \"delegate to codex\".
Run AI-powered code review using the codex CLI. Use when the user asks to \"codex review\", \"run codex review\", or \"review a commit with codex\".
Shared commit message rules and technical constraints referenced by $stage-commit and $commit-staged. Not typically invoked directly.