Agent skill
using-plan-and-execute
Use when starting any conversation - establishes mandatory workflows for finding and using skills, including using Read tool before announcing usage, following brainstorming before coding, and creating task todos for checklists
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/ed3dai/ed3d-plugins/tree/main/plugins/ed3d-plan-and-execute/skills/using-plan-and-execute
SKILL.md
IF A SKILL APPLIES TO YOUR TASK, YOU DO NOT HAVE A CHOICE. YOU MUST USE IT.
This is not negotiable. This is not optional. You cannot rationalize your way out of this. </EXTREMELY-IMPORTANT>
Getting Started with Skills
MANDATORY FIRST RESPONSE PROTOCOL
Before responding to ANY user message, you MUST complete this checklist:
- ☐ List to yourself ALL available skills (shown in your system context)
- ☐ Ask yourself: "Does ANY available skill match this request?"
- ☐ If yes: use the
Skilltool to invoke the skill and follow the skill exactly.
Responding WITHOUT completing this checklist = automatic failure.
Critical Rules
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Follow mandatory workflows. Brainstorming before coding. Check for relevant skills before ANY task.
-
Execute skills with the Skill tool
Common Rationalizations That Mean You're About To Fail
If you catch yourself thinking ANY of these thoughts, STOP. You are rationalizing. Check for and use the skill.
- "This is just a simple question" → WRONG. Questions are tasks. Check for skills.
- "I can check git/files quickly" → WRONG. Files don't have conversation context. Check for skills.
- "Let me gather information first" → WRONG. Skills tell you HOW to gather information. Check for skills.
- "This doesn't need a formal skill" → WRONG. If a skill exists for it, use it.
- "I remember this skill" → WRONG. Skills evolve. Read the current version.
- "This doesn't count as a task" → WRONG. If you're taking action, it's a task. Check for skills.
- "The skill is overkill for this" → WRONG. Skills exist because simple things become complex. Use it.
- "I'll just do this one thing first" → WRONG. Check for skills BEFORE doing anything.
Why: Skills document proven techniques that save time and prevent mistakes. Not using available skills means repeating solved problems and making known errors.
If a skill for your task exists, you must use it or you will fail at your task.
Skills with Checklists
If a skill has a checklist, YOU MUST create task todos for EACH item using TaskCreate (or TodoWrite in older Claude Code versions).
Don't:
- Work through checklist mentally
- Skip creating todos "to save time"
- Batch multiple items into one todo
- Mark complete without doing them
Why: Checklists without task tracking = steps get skipped. Every time. The overhead of task management is tiny compared to the cost of missing steps.
Announcing Skill Usage
Before using a skill, announce that you are using it. "I'm using [Skill Name] to [what you're doing]."
Examples:
- "I'm using the brainstorming skill to refine your idea into a design."
- "I'm using the test-driven-development skill to implement this feature."
Why: Transparency helps your human partner understand your process and catch errors early. It also confirms you actually read the skill.
About these skills
Many skills contain rigid rules (TDD, debugging, verification). Follow them exactly. Don't adapt away the discipline.
Some skills are flexible patterns (architecture, naming). Adapt core principles to your context.
The skill itself tells you which type it is.
Instructions ≠ Permission to Skip Workflows
Your human partner's specific instructions describe WHAT to do, not HOW.
"Add X", "Fix Y" = the goal, NOT permission to skip brainstorming, TDD, or RED-GREEN-REFACTOR.
Red flags: "Instruction was specific" • "Seems simple" • "Workflow is overkill"
Why: Specific instructions mean clear requirements, which is when workflows matter MOST. Skipping process on "simple" tasks is how simple tasks become complex problems.
Summary
Starting any task:
- If relevant skill exists → Use the skill
- Announce you're using it
- Follow what it says
Skill has checklist? TaskCreate for every item (or TodoWrite in older versions).
Finding a relevant skill = mandatory to read and use it. Not optional.
Recommended Agent Skills
Expand your agent's capabilities with these related and highly-rated skills.
doing-a-simple-two-stage-fanout
Use when analyzing a large corpus of text, code, or data that exceeds a single agent's effective context - orchestrates parallel Worker subagents, Critic review subagents, and a final Summarizer subagent with task tracking and failure recovery
using-generic-agents
Use to decide what kind of generic agent you should use
investigating-a-codebase
Use when planning or designing features and need to understand current codebase state, find existing patterns, or verify assumptions about what exists; when design makes assumptions about file locations, structure, or existing code that need verification - prevents hallucination by grounding plans in reality
researching-on-the-internet
Use when planning features and need current API docs, library patterns, or external knowledge; when testing hypotheses about technology choices or claims; when verifying assumptions before design decisions - gathers well-sourced, current information from the internet to inform technical decisions
creating-an-agent
Use when creating specialized subagents for Claude Code plugins or the Task tool - covers description writing for auto-delegation, tool selection, prompt structure, and testing agents
maintaining-project-context
Use when completing development phases or branches to identify and update CLAUDE.md or AGENTS.md files that may have become stale - analyzes what changed, determines affected contracts and documentation, and coordinates updates
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