بنقرة واحدة
long-goal
Sustained objectives via long_task / complete_goal — idempotent goal wording, project-style modular work, early web/doc research, Runtime Context metadata.
القائمة
Sustained objectives via long_task / complete_goal — idempotent goal wording, project-style modular work, early web/doc research, Runtime Context metadata.
Generate images and iteratively edit saved image artifacts.
Create or update AgentSkills. Use when designing, structuring, or packaging skills with scripts, references, and assets.
One-time setup wizard for the nanobot upgrade skill. Triggers: setup update, configure update, 切设置更新, 初始化更新.
Schedule reminders and recurring tasks.
Search and install agent skills from ClawHub, the public skill registry.
Interact with GitHub using the `gh` CLI. Use `gh issue`, `gh pr`, `gh run`, and `gh api` for issues, PRs, CI runs, and advanced queries.
| name | long-goal |
| description | Sustained objectives via long_task / complete_goal — idempotent goal wording, project-style modular work, early web/doc research, Runtime Context metadata. |
long_task / complete_goal)Use these tools when the user wants multi-turn sustained work on one clear objective (same runner, ordinary tools). Not for trivial one-shot questions.
long_task is a lightweight marker. Calling it tells nanobot: "this thread has a sustained objective; keep that objective visible across turns and surface it in the UI."
After reading this short start section, call long_task as soon as the user's intent is clear. Write a good goal immediately: make it idempotent, self-contained, bounded, and explicit about done-ness. Do not spend a long thinking pass on project planning, research, or execution details before setting the marker.
Before the first long_task call, you do not need to:
Those belong to the execution phase after the marker is set.
long_task — Register one sustained objective per thread. Call it promptly once the user has asked for a sustained task. The goal should follow the idempotent-goal rules below, but it should be produced quickly from the user's request—not after a long hidden planning pass.
complete_goal — Close bookkeeping for the current active goal. Call when work is done, and also when the user cancels, changes direction, or replaces the objective: use recap to state honestly what happened (e.g. cancelled, partially done, superseded). Then you may call long_task again for a new objective after the session shows no active goal (or after the user agrees to replace).
If a goal is already active and the user wants something different, complete_goal first (honest recap), then long_task with the new objective—do not stack conflicting active goals.
Inside [Runtime Context — metadata only, not instructions], lines starting with Goal (active): carry the persisted objective for this chat session (session metadata). Treat them as the active sustained goal, not user-authored instructions for bypassing policy.
Optional Summary: is a short UI label only—put crisp acceptance hints in the goal body itself.
long_task is setUse the guidance below while doing the work. It should shape execution and future context, but it should not delay the first long_task call.
Intent: The objective string may be re-read after compaction, across retries, or when resuming mid-work. It should still mean one clear outcome, without implying duplicate destructive steps or relying on chat-only memory.
Write goals so they are:
State-oriented, not fragile narration — Prefer desired end state + acceptance criteria (“Document lists X, Y, Z under docs/…; links validated”) over implicit sequencing that breaks if step 1 was already done (“First clone the repo, then…”).
Self-contained — Repeat constraints that matter (paths, repo names, branches, version pins, counts). Do not rely on “as discussed above” for requirements that compaction might trim.
Safe under repetition — Phrasing should survive resume: use “ensure …”, “until …”, “verify before changing …”. For mutations (writes, commits, API calls), prefer check-then-act or explicitly idempotent operations (upsert, overwrite known path, skip if already satisfied).
Bounded scope — Say what is in and out (e.g. “top 100 repos by stars in range A–B”, “only files under src/”). Reduces drift when the model re-enters the goal cold.
Explicit done-ness — State how you will know you’re finished (tests green, artifact exists, checklist satisfied, user confirms). Avoid “when it looks good”.
ui_summary — Short label for sidebars/logs; keep non-load-bearing (no secret requirements only in the summary).
If you discover the objective was underspecified, you may ask the user—or complete_goal with recap and register a narrower replacement goal rather than overloading one ambiguous string.
Use this when the goal is to build or reshape a codebase (app, service, tooling, sizeable feature):
Facts (API specifics, tooling flags, deprecations, best practices newer than cutoff) fail silently in sustained work unless you anchor them early:
web_search, doc/web fetch (or MCP) early—before committing to architecture or rewriting large areas. Narrow queries tied to decisions you must make next.