Agent skill
spec-driven-development
Creates specs before coding. Use when starting a new project, feature, or significant change and no specification exists yet. Use when requirements are unclear, ambiguous, or only exist as a vague idea.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/addyosmani/agent-skills/tree/main/skills/spec-driven-development
SKILL.md
Spec-Driven Development
Overview
Write a structured specification before writing any code. The spec is the shared source of truth between you and the human engineer — it defines what we're building, why, and how we'll know it's done. Code without a spec is guessing.
When to Use
- Starting a new project or feature
- Requirements are ambiguous or incomplete
- The change touches multiple files or modules
- You're about to make an architectural decision
- The task would take more than 30 minutes to implement
When NOT to use: Single-line fixes, typo corrections, or changes where requirements are unambiguous and self-contained.
The Gated Workflow
Spec-driven development has four phases. Do not advance to the next phase until the current one is validated.
SPECIFY ──→ PLAN ──→ TASKS ──→ IMPLEMENT
│ │ │ │
▼ ▼ ▼ ▼
Human Human Human Human
reviews reviews reviews reviews
Phase 1: Specify
Start with a high-level vision. Ask the human clarifying questions until requirements are concrete.
Surface assumptions immediately. Before writing any spec content, list what you're assuming:
ASSUMPTIONS I'M MAKING:
1. This is a web application (not native mobile)
2. Authentication uses session-based cookies (not JWT)
3. The database is PostgreSQL (based on existing Prisma schema)
4. We're targeting modern browsers only (no IE11)
→ Correct me now or I'll proceed with these.
Don't silently fill in ambiguous requirements. The spec's entire purpose is to surface misunderstandings before code gets written — assumptions are the most dangerous form of misunderstanding.
Write a spec document covering these six core areas:
-
Objective — What are we building and why? Who is the user? What does success look like?
-
Commands — Full executable commands with flags, not just tool names.
Build: npm run build Test: npm test -- --coverage Lint: npm run lint --fix Dev: npm run dev -
Project Structure — Where source code lives, where tests go, where docs belong.
src/ → Application source code src/components → React components src/lib → Shared utilities tests/ → Unit and integration tests e2e/ → End-to-end tests docs/ → Documentation -
Code Style — One real code snippet showing your style beats three paragraphs describing it. Include naming conventions, formatting rules, and examples of good output.
-
Testing Strategy — What framework, where tests live, coverage expectations, which test levels for which concerns.
-
Boundaries — Three-tier system:
- Always do: Run tests before commits, follow naming conventions, validate inputs
- Ask first: Database schema changes, adding dependencies, changing CI config
- Never do: Commit secrets, edit vendor directories, remove failing tests without approval
Spec template:
# Spec: [Project/Feature Name]
## Objective
[What we're building and why. User stories or acceptance criteria.]
## Tech Stack
[Framework, language, key dependencies with versions]
## Commands
[Build, test, lint, dev — full commands]
## Project Structure
[Directory layout with descriptions]
## Code Style
[Example snippet + key conventions]
## Testing Strategy
[Framework, test locations, coverage requirements, test levels]
## Boundaries
- Always: [...]
- Ask first: [...]
- Never: [...]
## Success Criteria
[How we'll know this is done — specific, testable conditions]
## Open Questions
[Anything unresolved that needs human input]
Reframe instructions as success criteria. When receiving vague requirements, translate them into concrete conditions:
REQUIREMENT: "Make the dashboard faster"
REFRAMED SUCCESS CRITERIA:
- Dashboard LCP < 2.5s on 4G connection
- Initial data load completes in < 500ms
- No layout shift during load (CLS < 0.1)
→ Are these the right targets?
This lets you loop, retry, and problem-solve toward a clear goal rather than guessing what "faster" means.
Phase 2: Plan
With the validated spec, generate a technical implementation plan:
- Identify the major components and their dependencies
- Determine the implementation order (what must be built first)
- Note risks and mitigation strategies
- Identify what can be built in parallel vs. what must be sequential
- Define verification checkpoints between phases
The plan should be reviewable: the human should be able to read it and say "yes, that's the right approach" or "no, change X."
Phase 3: Tasks
Break the plan into discrete, implementable tasks:
- Each task should be completable in a single focused session
- Each task has explicit acceptance criteria
- Each task includes a verification step (test, build, manual check)
- Tasks are ordered by dependency, not by perceived importance
- No task should require changing more than ~5 files
Task template:
- [ ] Task: [Description]
- Acceptance: [What must be true when done]
- Verify: [How to confirm — test command, build, manual check]
- Files: [Which files will be touched]
Phase 4: Implement
Execute tasks one at a time following incremental-implementation and test-driven-development skills. Use context-engineering to load the right spec sections and source files at each step rather than flooding the agent with the entire spec.
Keeping the Spec Alive
The spec is a living document, not a one-time artifact:
- Update when decisions change — If you discover the data model needs to change, update the spec first, then implement.
- Update when scope changes — Features added or cut should be reflected in the spec.
- Commit the spec — The spec belongs in version control alongside the code.
- Reference the spec in PRs — Link back to the spec section that each PR implements.
Common Rationalizations
| Rationalization | Reality |
|---|---|
| "This is simple, I don't need a spec" | Simple tasks don't need long specs, but they still need acceptance criteria. A two-line spec is fine. |
| "I'll write the spec after I code it" | That's documentation, not specification. The spec's value is in forcing clarity before code. |
| "The spec will slow us down" | A 15-minute spec prevents hours of rework. Waterfall in 15 minutes beats debugging in 15 hours. |
| "Requirements will change anyway" | That's why the spec is a living document. An outdated spec is still better than no spec. |
| "The user knows what they want" | Even clear requests have implicit assumptions. The spec surfaces those assumptions. |
Red Flags
- Starting to write code without any written requirements
- Asking "should I just start building?" before clarifying what "done" means
- Implementing features not mentioned in any spec or task list
- Making architectural decisions without documenting them
- Skipping the spec because "it's obvious what to build"
Verification
Before proceeding to implementation, confirm:
- The spec covers all six core areas
- The human has reviewed and approved the spec
- Success criteria are specific and testable
- Boundaries (Always/Ask First/Never) are defined
- The spec is saved to a file in the repository
Recommended Agent Skills
Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.
test-driven-development
Drives development with tests. Use when implementing any logic, fixing any bug, or changing any behavior. Use when you need to prove that code works, when a bug report arrives, or when you're about to modify existing functionality.
documentation-and-adrs
Records decisions and documentation. Use when making architectural decisions, changing public APIs, shipping features, or when you need to record context that future engineers and agents will need to understand the codebase.
frontend-ui-engineering
Builds production-quality UIs. Use when building or modifying user-facing interfaces. Use when creating components, implementing layouts, managing state, or when the output needs to look and feel production-quality rather than AI-generated.
api-and-interface-design
Guides stable API and interface design. Use when designing APIs, module boundaries, or any public interface. Use when creating REST or GraphQL endpoints, defining type contracts between modules, or establishing boundaries between frontend and backend.
using-agent-skills
Discovers and invokes agent skills. Use when starting a session or when you need to discover which skill applies to the current task. This is the meta-skill that governs how all other skills are discovered and invoked.
incremental-implementation
Delivers changes incrementally. Use when implementing any feature or change that touches more than one file. Use when you're about to write a large amount of code at once, or when a task feels too big to land in one step.
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