بنقرة واحدة
handoff
يحتوي handoff على 15 من skills المجمعة من AbdurRafay2004، مع تغطية مهنية على مستوى المستودع وصفحات skill داخل الموقع.
Skills في هذا المستودع
Scan the codebase for architectural friction and propose deepening opportunities as candidate cards, then interrogate the chosen one into a decision. Two entry points — proactive, when the user asks "improve the architecture" or "why is this codebase painful to work in"; reactive, when the debug skill's "3+ failed fixes = architectural problem" rule hands off here. Inherently T2/T3; the outcome is a decision plus a plan.
Use when starting any new feature or product request, before writing a plan or code — turns an idea into a short approved spec by surfacing the decisions that will hurt later. Depth scales with risk tier.
Use when encountering any bug, test failure, unexpected behavior, or performance regression — before proposing any fix. Root-cause discipline plus a feedback-loop method; applies at every tier.
Use when designing or improving a module's interface, deciding where a seam goes, making code more testable or navigable, or pinning down domain terminology. Provides the deep-module vocabulary other skills lean on.
Interview the user relentlessly about a plan or design until reaching shared understanding, resolving each branch of the decision tree. Use when user wants to stress-test a plan, get grilled on their design, or mentions "grill me".
Use at the end of T3 work, after an incident/rollback, or when the user asks for a retro — turns what happened into recorded learnings that live in the repo (CHANGELOG entry, typed LEARNINGS.md entries, follow-up tasks, and — only with explicit user approval — new RULES).
Scaffold the handoff project-memory system into THIS repository (new or existing) — copies the template tree into .handoff/, then runs a guided discovery pass that drafts a real STATUS, MAP, TECH_STACK, and PRODUCT from the actual codebase and confirms with the user before saving. Use when the user says "set up handoff", "initialize handoff", "add project memory", or when a repo has no .handoff/ and the user wants one. Run once per repo.
Use when work is verified and ready to leave the machine — branch/PR/merge/deploy/smoke-check. Triggers on "ship it", "deploy", "merge the PR", "push this", "release", "go live", "cutover". Covers git hygiene, PR and merge discipline, deploy-target detection (Cloudflare Workers/Pages via wrangler, Vercel, Convex, Supabase), post-deploy smoke checks, and the T3 launch runbook with rollback criteria.
Use when building any T3 feature or bugfix, recommended for T2 on the affected path — write the failing test before the implementation, one behavior at a time, through public interfaces.
The operating pipeline for all development work — 6 phases (Brief, Plan, Build, Verify, Ship, Learn) with risk tiers that decide how much process a task gets. Use at the start of any development task to pick the tier and execution mode, when unsure whether a task needs a plan/tests/review, or when another skill needs the phase and tier vocabulary. This skill overrides any process embedded in other skills.
Use to exercise the running app in a real browser — after UI changes, before ship, or when the user asks to QA the site, smoke-test a branch, or check "does it actually work". Drives affected routes headlessly via Playwright, captures console errors, failed requests, and screenshots, and produces a report with a health score. Report-only — it finds bugs, it never fixes them.
Use when a task would flood the main context window — broad searches, verbose test/build output, 2+ independent parallel tasks, or an isolated large workstream. How to hand work to subagents well, and when not to.
Use for a full security audit — T3 verify gate (money, auth, user data, migrations), pre-launch check, or when the user asks to audit the codebase for vulnerabilities. Whole-repo depth — for quick diff-scoped checks of pending changes, use the built-in /security-review instead.
Use when about to claim work is complete, fixed, or passing — before committing, opening a PR, or telling the user it works. Requires running verification commands and confirming output first; evidence before assertions, always.
Use when a task is T2/T3 — before building a feature that spans multiple files or carries risk. Produces an implementation plan with exact files, complete code steps, and per-stage verification.