| name | document |
| allowed-tools | Bash, Read, Grep, Glob, Write, Edit, Task, AskUserQuestion |
| description | Run /document pr | changelog | release-note | postmortem (or let it ask) to write the human-facing prose about a change. Drafts from the real commits and diff, writing to the right place. Does not write code, tests, or ADRs. |
Output style (plain words, no dashes)
Write everything this skill produces (the files and reports it writes, and every message shown to the engineer) in plain, simple language. Keep the technical terms that carry real meaning, but explain each one in plain words so a busy reader understands it fast. Do not use dashes of any kind: no em dash, no en dash, and no hyphen used as punctuation. Use short sentences, commas, or parentheses instead. Clear beats clever.
What this skill does
Your role: the technical writer who writes from the record, not from imagination — and writes for the reader, not the author. Every sentence traces to something that actually happened (a commit, a diff, an incident fact you were given), and every document is pitched at whoever has to act on it: a reviewer needs the why and the risk, an end user needs the what changed for me, a team reading a postmortem needs the honest causal chain. You never invent a timeline entry, a cause, or a change that isn't in the source.
Generates one of four document types from the real change history. The main thread writes the document itself; the only thing it may offload is reading, and only for a very large diff, to a read-only scout subagent on the cheapest model (Claude Code: haiku):
| Type | Source | Audience | Output |
|---|
pr | branch commits + diff vs base | reviewers | PR title + body (chat; optionally gh pr create/edit) |
changelog | merged change | developers | entry appended to CHANGELOG.md (Keep a Changelog) |
release-note | a tag/version range | end users | docs/releases/<version>.md (or chat) |
postmortem | an incident (engineer-described, plus any /debug record) | team | docs/postmortems/<date>-<slug>.md |
Acts. Asks at most one question (which type) when it can't be inferred, and — for postmortems — asks for the incident facts it can't read from git.
Artifact ownership
PR text, CHANGELOG.md, docs/releases/, docs/postmortems/ — owned by this skill. It writes nothing else.
Portability (any OS, any agent)
Written for any Agent Skills client on macOS, Linux, or Windows:
- Commands:
git (and optionally gh) are the only CLIs, and behave the same on every OS — run the git lines as shown. Other shell snippets are POSIX reference, not literal scripts: don't assume find, grep, sed, cat, test/[ ], command -v, or node -e exist. Use your agent's own cross-platform file tools (read, search/glob, write) for those, and apply branching logic yourself rather than via shell if/variables/redirects.
- Bundled files: referenced by paths relative to this skill's folder. The main thread resolves this skill's folder to an absolute path (it already resolves these relative paths, so it knows the folder) and reads them itself at write time (Step 3):
agent-prompt.md and the one template for the chosen type.
- No interactive-question support? The doc-type pick uses an interactive picker where the agent has one; without it, ask the doc-type question as plain text with the same options.
Execution
1. Determine the document type
- If passed as an argument (
pr, changelog, release-note, postmortem): use it.
- Otherwise infer from context where obvious (on a feature branch ahead of base →
pr; just tagged a version → release-note), then confirm or ask with one question. Mark the inferred type (recommended); the picker adds a free-text custom slot last automatically. Present these as your agent's interactive option picker (AskUserQuestion on Claude Code) — or as plain-text options with the same choices (custom option last) if it has none:
"What should I write?"
header: "Doc type"
options:
- label: "PR description" → pr # mark (recommended) if inferred
- label: "Changelog entry" → changelog
- label: "Release notes" → release-note
- label: "Postmortem" → postmortem
2. Gather the source material
Collect the lightweight history below, then read the diff and files yourself at write time (a scout subagent may do the reading for a very large diff).
Run these git/gh commands as shown; do the non-command steps with your agent's own file tools and your own branching logic.
git rev-parse --verify main
git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD
git log --oneline "BASE..HEAD"
git diff --name-only "BASE...HEAD"
git tag --sort=-creatordate
- context for the "why": list the ADR files under
docs/adr/ (names starting with a digit) and take the 3 most recently modified — paths only — using your file/glob tools.
- pr only — three checks (record each result for step 2's edge handling):
- Is
gh available on this system? (GH_INSTALLED)
- Does the repo have a git remote? Run
git remote; a non-empty result means HAS_REMOTE.
- Does a PR already exist? Run
gh pr view --json number -q .number. If it prints a PR number, treat that as PR_EXISTS; if it errors/prints nothing, no PR exists.
Per-type edge handling the main thread resolves before writing:
- release-note range: if tags exist, the range is
<previous-tag>..<latest-tag> (or a range the engineer named). If NO_TAGS, don't guess — ask: "No version tags found. Give me a version name and range (e.g. v1.0.0, covering <commit>..HEAD), or I'll cover all commits since the first one." Pass the resolved range/version to the subagent.
- pr + gh: only offer to create/update the PR via
gh when GH_INSTALLED and HAS_REMOTE. If PR_EXISTS, the action is gh pr edit (update the body), not gh pr create. If gh isn't usable or no remote, the PR text is chat-only — don't attempt gh.
- postmortem: git won't contain the incident narrative. Ask the engineer for the essentials if not already provided — what broke, when (with timezone), user impact, how it was detected, and the root cause/fix (point them to any
/debug output if it exists). Pass their account as the incident facts. The subagent must not invent timeline entries or causes beyond what they give.
3. Write the document (main thread)
Resolve this skill's folder to an absolute path (you already resolve these relative paths, so you know the folder) and Read agent-prompt.md and the one template for the chosen type, templates/<type>.md, now (only now, at write time). Follow agent-prompt.md and write the document yourself. Do not spawn a writer; for a postmortem, the root-cause synthesis is yours to reason through carefully on the main thread.
The inputs to apply:
- Document type + its template (the chosen one only; read it)
- Source: commit list, diff command, and (postmortem) the incident facts. Read the diff yourself; for a very large diff (e.g. >25 files), offload the reading to a
scout subagent (haiku) that returns a compact summary by file-group/feature, and write from that
- Project-context contents (project name, conventions) — read
AGENTS.md, or CLAUDE.md fallback — + recent ADR paths for the "why"
- Output target for the type and today's date
- pr: the gh action —
none (chat-only) | gh pr create | gh pr edit (from the GH_INSTALLED/HAS_REMOTE/PR_EXISTS checks)
- changelog: match the existing
CHANGELOG.md format if the file exists (don't impose Keep a Changelog over a different established style)
- release-note: the resolved version + range
4. Relay the result
## /document complete
**Type**: <pr | changelog | release-note | postmortem>
**Written to**: <PR body shown below | CHANGELOG.md | docs/releases/<v>.md | docs/postmortems/<file>>
<for pr: the title + body, ready to paste, or "PR #N updated" if gh was used>
<for the others: a 2 to 3 line preview + the file path>
For pr, always show the full text in chat (so it's usable even without gh). For the file types, show a short preview and the path. This skill does not commit, push, or merge — it produces the prose.
Reference files
agent-prompt.md — the writing guide the main thread reads and follows at write time (Step 3)
templates/ — one structure file per type (pr.md, changelog.md, release-note.md, postmortem.md); the main thread reads only the chosen one at write time