بنقرة واحدة
freeflow
يحتوي freeflow على 26 من skills المجمعة من hassan-mohiddin، مع تغطية مهنية على مستوى المستودع وصفحات skill داخل الموقع.
Skills في هذا المستودع
Use when coordinating Freeflow Pi/cmux pane delegation, orchestrator/planning-parent/execution-parent workflows, task packets, child results, context locality, capability reroutes, multi-agent execution, work packages, worktrees, routing fresh-reviewer/subagent requests, or when the user asks to spawn/manage visible pane agents.
Use when shaping, reviewing, implementing, or diagnosing work where module/interface/seam/state/role-boundary choices affect complexity, locality, testability, future change, or repeated edge-case churn. Use for architecture direction, state machines, event systems, tool interfaces, prompt/result serialization, delegation/context boundaries, role ownership, failure contracts, growing scope, shallow modules, bad seams, broad refactors, and review loops that keep finding new edge cases.
Use for pre-work thinking before consequential work, including codebase exploration, brainstorming, planning direction, shaping ideas/features/specs, conceptual/design/routing/interface/state/context-boundary questions, workflow/tool-surface questions, "should we" / "how should we" / "what do you think" prompts, vague requests, and work that needs evidence before spec, plan, build, review, verification, or durable memory.
Use when implementing an approved plan, executing planned slices, resuming planned work, handling planned verification failures, adjudicating review findings during execution, or encountering scope/source conflicts while carrying out a plan.
Use when context is low, scope is ambiguous, implementation/review/verification reveals unknowns, the user asks a question or suggests a path that could be misread as correction/permission, or the agent may be about to make a user-owned decision.
Use when asked to review whether a spec, plan, decision note, discovery checkpoint, handoff, or other durable artifact is fit to guide future work; also use when adjudicating artifact-review findings or repeated review loops.
Use when reviewing completed work, preparing reviewer prompts or subagent review context, receiving review feedback, applying reviewer comments, deciding whether feedback is blocking, handling repeated review loops, or checking work before merge/handoff.
Use when doing consequential work such as implementation, bug fixing, planning, discovery-for-action, review, verification, or handoff.
Use when turning an approved spec, clarified requirements, explicit task context, strict-workflow work, or delegated/future-agent work into an executable implementation plan before coding.
Use before claiming work is done, fixed, passing, implemented, reviewed, or ready; when verification fails; or when the user asks to skip checks but still wants a completion claim.
Use when asked to create or update a durable spec, PRD, requirements document, or decision artifact from agreed requirements, discovery, brainstorming, or source evidence, especially for strict-workflow risk areas that may need owner confirmation before writing.
Use after the workflow, interview-gate, discovery-light, or full Discover route is clear when choosing between native tools and Freeflow routed tools, retrieving repo/local/vault evidence, transforming bounded evidence, handling unknown-size or broad output, running likely-large/noisy commands, recovering vaulted output, configuring outputRouter/observedRouting/scriptTransform, or handling optional native read/bash safety-net routing.
Use when committing completed work, preparing a git commit, deciding what to stage, reviewing staged/unstaged/untracked changes, handling commit-everything pressure, pushing committed work, or checking generated, sensitive, user-owned, or mixed changes before commit or push.
Use when setting up, installing, enabling, initializing, or configuring Freeflow in a repo, choosing Codex/Claude/multi-agent activation, creating `.freeflow/config.json`, changing the repo default mode during setup, or opting into output-router/observed-routing/script-transform setup.
Use when a user asks to set, change, infer, or discuss conversation/workflow/strict-workflow mode, or when task risk suggests recommending a workflow mode.
Use when reviewing a pull request or local diff before merge.
Use when the user asks whether an issue, task, or product decision already exists.
Use when reviewing a pull request or local diff before merge.
Use when the user explicitly asks to bypass, skip, or reduce workflow ceremony, especially with `/bypass next` or `/bypass task`.
Use when asked to investigate or fix a bug, failed test, flaky failure, regression, performance problem, unexpected behavior, or anything described as broken.
Use when a skill behavior needs evaluation, a preserved skill failure needs a repeatable eval, baseline versus with-skill or previous-version comparison is needed, eval artifacts conflict, or skill wording is being revised from eval evidence.
Use when creating, updating, or relying on a temporary or durable handoff for a future agent/session, especially before compaction, pausing work, transferring context to a new chat, storing project memory, or resuming from another agent's notes.
Use when creating, rewriting, tightening, or reviewing an agent skill's instructions, trigger description, structure, examples, or bundled resources.
Capture settled durable decisions into existing owning repo memory, or ask where to record them before creating a destination. Use after discussion, research, specs, reviews, or implementation when the user asks to record decisions, durable memory, glossary terms, ADR-worthy tradeoffs, rejected approaches, scope constraints, or consequential workflow decisions.
Use when brainstorming, shaping a feature or task, stress-testing a plan, clarifying product or domain direction, or reaching shared understanding before specs, plans, implementation, or normal non-code decisions.
Use when gathering evidence before a decision, summarizing repo or external facts, checking whether context supports a proposed path, or preparing a brief before specs, plans, brainstorming, or implementation.