Agent skill

update-spec

Captures executable contracts and coding knowledge into .trellis/spec/ documents after implementation, debugging, or design decisions. Enforces code-spec depth for infra and cross-layer changes with mandatory sections for signatures, contracts, validation matrices, and test points. Use when a feature is implemented, a bug is fixed, a design decision is made, a new pattern is discovered, or cross-layer contracts change.

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Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/mindfold-ai/Trellis/tree/main/.agents/skills/update-spec

SKILL.md

Update Code-Spec - Capture Executable Contracts

When you learn something valuable (from debugging, implementing, or discussion), use this skill to update the relevant code-spec documents.

Timing: After completing a task, fixing a bug, or discovering a new pattern


Code-Spec First Rule (CRITICAL)

In this project, "spec" for implementation work means code-spec:

  • Executable contracts (not principle-only text)
  • Concrete signatures, payload fields, env keys, and boundary behavior
  • Testable validation/error behavior

If the change touches infra or cross-layer contracts, code-spec depth is mandatory.

Required sections for infra/cross-layer specs:

  1. Scope / Trigger
  2. Signatures (command/API/DB)
  3. Contracts (request/response/env)
  4. Validation & Error Matrix
  5. Good/Base/Bad Cases
  6. Tests Required (with assertion points)
  7. Wrong vs Correct (at least one pair)

When to Update Code-Specs

Trigger Example Target Spec
Implemented a feature Added template download with giget Relevant backend/ or frontend/ file
Made a design decision Used type field + mapping table for extensibility Relevant code-spec + "Design Decisions" section
Fixed a bug Found a subtle issue with error handling backend/error-handling.md
Discovered a pattern Found a better way to structure code Relevant backend/ or frontend/ file
Hit a gotcha Learned that X must be done before Y Relevant code-spec + "Common Mistakes" section
Established a convention Team agreed on naming pattern quality-guidelines.md
New thinking trigger "Don't forget to check X before doing Y" guides/*.md (as a checklist item, not detailed rules)

Key Insight: Code-spec updates are NOT just for problems. Every feature implementation contains design decisions and contracts that future AI/developers need to execute safely.


Spec Structure Overview

.trellis/spec/
├── backend/           # Backend coding standards
│   ├── index.md       # Overview and links
│   └── *.md           # Topic-specific guidelines
├── frontend/          # Frontend coding standards
│   ├── index.md       # Overview and links
│   └── *.md           # Topic-specific guidelines
└── guides/            # Thinking checklists (NOT coding specs!)
    ├── index.md       # Guide index
    └── *.md           # Topic-specific guides

CRITICAL: Code-Spec vs Guide - Know the Difference

Type Location Purpose Content Style
Code-Spec backend/*.md, frontend/*.md Tell AI "how to implement safely" Signatures, contracts, matrices, cases, test points
Guide guides/*.md Help AI "what to think about" Checklists, questions, pointers to specs

Decision Rule: Ask yourself:

  • "This is how to write the code" → Put in backend/ or frontend/
  • "This is what to consider before writing" → Put in guides/

Example:

Learning Wrong Location Correct Location
"Use reconfigure() not TextIOWrapper for Windows stdout" guides/cross-platform-thinking-guide.md backend/script-conventions.md
"Remember to check encoding when writing cross-platform code" backend/script-conventions.md guides/cross-platform-thinking-guide.md

Guides should be short checklists that point to specs, not duplicate the detailed rules.


Update Process

Step 1: Identify What You Learned

Answer these questions:

  1. What did you learn? (Be specific)
  2. Why is it important? (What problem does it prevent?)
  3. Where does it belong? (Which spec file?)

Step 2: Classify the Update Type

Type Description Action
Design Decision Why we chose approach X over Y Add to "Design Decisions" section
Project Convention How we do X in this project Add to relevant section with examples
New Pattern A reusable approach discovered Add to "Patterns" section
Forbidden Pattern Something that causes problems Add to "Anti-patterns" or "Don't" section
Common Mistake Easy-to-make error Add to "Common Mistakes" section
Convention Agreed-upon standard Add to relevant section
Gotcha Non-obvious behavior Add warning callout

Step 3: Read the Target Code-Spec

Before editing, read the current code-spec to:

  • Understand existing structure
  • Avoid duplicating content
  • Find the right section for your update
bash
cat .trellis/spec/<category>/<file>.md

Step 4: Make the Update

Follow these principles:

  1. Be Specific: Include concrete examples, not just abstract rules
  2. Explain Why: State the problem this prevents
  3. Show Contracts: Add signatures, payload fields, and error behavior
  4. Show Code: Add code snippets for key patterns
  5. Keep it Short: One concept per section

Step 5: Update the Index (if needed)

If you added a new section or the code-spec status changed, update the category's index.md.


Update Templates

Mandatory Template for Infra/Cross-Layer Work

markdown
## Scenario: <name>

### 1. Scope / Trigger
- Trigger: <why this requires code-spec depth>

### 2. Signatures
### 3. Contracts
### 4. Validation & Error Matrix
### 5. Good/Base/Bad Cases
### 6. Tests Required
### 7. Wrong vs Correct
#### Wrong
...
#### Correct
...

Adding a Design Decision

markdown
### Design Decision: [Decision Name]

**Context**: What problem were we solving?

**Options Considered**:
1. Option A - brief description
2. Option B - brief description

**Decision**: We chose Option X because...

**Example**:
\`\`\`typescript
// How it's implemented
code example
\`\`\`

**Extensibility**: How to extend this in the future...

Adding a Project Convention

markdown
### Convention: [Convention Name]

**What**: Brief description of the convention.

**Why**: Why we do it this way in this project.

**Example**:
\`\`\`typescript
// How to follow this convention
code example
\`\`\`

**Related**: Links to related conventions or specs.

Adding a New Pattern

markdown
### Pattern Name

**Problem**: What problem does this solve?

**Solution**: Brief description of the approach.

**Example**:
\`\`\`
// Good
code example

// Bad
code example
\`\`\`

**Why**: Explanation of why this works better.

Adding a Forbidden Pattern

markdown
### Don't: Pattern Name

**Problem**:
\`\`\`
// Don't do this
bad code example
\`\`\`

**Why it's bad**: Explanation of the issue.

**Instead**:
\`\`\`
// Do this instead
good code example
\`\`\`

Adding a Common Mistake

markdown
### Common Mistake: Description

**Symptom**: What goes wrong

**Cause**: Why this happens

**Fix**: How to correct it

**Prevention**: How to avoid it in the future

Adding a Gotcha

markdown
> **Warning**: Brief description of the non-obvious behavior.
>
> Details about when this happens and how to handle it.

Interactive Mode

If you're unsure what to update, answer these prompts:

  1. What did you just finish?

    • Fixed a bug
    • Implemented a feature
    • Refactored code
    • Had a discussion about approach
  2. What did you learn or decide?

    • Design decision (why X over Y)
    • Project convention (how we do X)
    • Non-obvious behavior (gotcha)
    • Better approach (pattern)
  3. Would future AI/developers need to know this?

    • To understand how the code works → Yes, update spec
    • To maintain or extend the feature → Yes, update spec
    • To avoid repeating mistakes → Yes, update spec
    • Purely one-off implementation detail → Maybe skip
  4. Which area does it relate to?

    • Backend code
    • Frontend code
    • Cross-layer data flow
    • Code organization/reuse
    • Quality/testing

Quality Checklist

Before finishing your code-spec update:

  • Is the content specific and actionable?
  • Did you include a code example?
  • Did you explain WHY, not just WHAT?
  • Did you include executable signatures/contracts?
  • Did you include validation and error matrix?
  • Did you include Good/Base/Bad cases?
  • Did you include required tests with assertion points?
  • Is it in the right code-spec file?
  • Does it duplicate existing content?
  • Would a new team member understand it?

Relationship to Other Commands

Development Flow:
  Learn something → $update-spec → Knowledge captured
       ↑                                  ↓
  $break-loop ←──────────────────── Future sessions benefit
  (deep bug analysis)
  • $break-loop - Analyzes bugs deeply, often reveals spec updates needed
  • $update-spec - Actually makes the updates (this skill)
  • $finish-work - Reminds you to check if specs need updates

Core Philosophy

Code-specs are living documents. Every debugging session, every "aha moment" is an opportunity to make the implementation contract clearer.

The goal is institutional memory:

  • What one person learns, everyone benefits from
  • What AI learns in one session, persists to future sessions
  • Mistakes become documented guardrails

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