work

📁 paulrberg/dot-agents 📅 Today
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总安装量
1
周安装量
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/paulrberg/dot-agents --skill work

Agent 安装分布

amp 1
cline 1
opencode 1
cursor 1
continue 1
kimi-cli 1

Skill 文档

Work

Orchestrate end-to-end task implementation: understand the task, assess complexity, implement directly or distribute across a team, then polish the result.

Workflow

1) Parse Task

Read the task description from $ARGUMENTS.

  • If $ARGUMENTS is empty, ask the user for a task description and stop.
  • Extract key signals: scope (files, modules, components mentioned), action type (new feature, bug fix, refactor, migration), and any constraints.
  • Note any referenced issues, PRs, or URLs for later context gathering.

2) Assess Complexity

Classify the task as simple or complex using these heuristics:

Signal Simple Complex
File count 1-3 files 4+ files
Module span Single module or package Cross-module or cross-package
Dependency chain No new dependencies New packages or service integrations
Risk surface Low (UI, docs, config) High (auth, payments, data, infra)
Parallelism Sequential steps only Independent subtasks benefit from concurrency

A task is complex when 3 or more signals fall in the complex column. When in doubt, prefer the simple path — team overhead is only justified when parallelism provides a real speedup.

  • Simple — proceed to Step 3.
  • Complex — proceed to Step 4.

3) Implement (Simple Path)

Execute the task directly without spawning subagents.

  1. Gather context: Read all relevant files. Understand existing code, tests, and conventions.
  2. Implement: Make the changes. Follow project conventions inferred from existing code, linters, and formatters.
  3. Verify: Run the narrowest useful checks:
    • Formatter/linter on touched files.
    • Targeted tests for touched modules.
    • Type check when relevant.
    • If fast checks pass, run broader checks only when risk warrants it.
  4. Proceed to Step 5 (Polish).

4) Implement (Complex Path)

Distribute work across a team of subagents.

4a) Decompose

Break the task into independent subtasks. Each subtask should:

  • Target a distinct set of files with minimal overlap.
  • Be completable without waiting on other subtasks (no circular dependencies).
  • Include clear acceptance criteria.

Avoid over-decomposition. If subtasks cannot run in parallel, prefer the simple path.

4b) Create Team and Assign

Create a team with a name derived from the task (e.g., “add-auth”, “refactor-api”). Create a task for each subtask. Set up dependencies when ordering matters.

Spawn implementation agents as teammates. Assign each agent one or more tasks.

Recommended team sizing:

  • 1 agent per module when modules are independent.
  • Separate agent for shared utilities when consumers depend on them (utility blocks consumers).
  • Dedicated agent for tests if test volume is high.

4c) Coordinate

Monitor progress. As agents complete tasks:

  • Review output for integration issues.
  • Resolve cross-agent conflicts (merge overlaps, API mismatches).
  • Assign follow-up tasks if gaps emerge.

After all tasks complete:

  • Run integration verification: full test suite, type check, lint.
  • Fix any integration issues directly — do not re-spawn agents for small fixes.
  • Shut down teammates.
  • Proceed to Step 5 (Polish).

5) Polish

Invoke /code-polish to simplify and review all session-modified files.

Wait for completion. If it reports residual risks or stop conditions, relay them to the user.

This step is mandatory — always run it, even if the implementation seems clean.

Error Handling

Error Response
Empty $ARGUMENTS Ask for a task description and stop
Verification failures after impl Attempt to fix; if unfixable, report to user before polishing
Team agent fails or times out Reclaim the task and complete it directly
code-polish reports stop condition Relay to user with context

Stop Conditions

Stop and ask for direction when:

  • The task description is ambiguous and multiple interpretations exist.
  • Implementation requires changing public APIs or breaking contracts not mentioned in the task.
  • The task scope grows beyond the original description during implementation.
  • External dependencies (APIs, services, packages) are unavailable or broken.
  • A CRITICAL security concern is discovered in existing code adjacent to the task.