| name | revise |
| description | Surgically update an existing implementation plan in .rpiv/artifacts/plans/ based on review feedback, mid-implementation discoveries, or new constraints, preserving structure and quality rather than rewriting. Use when the user wants a plan adjusted after code-review feedback, has hit a blocker mid-implement, scope changed, or asks to "revise the plan". |
| argument-hint | [plan-path | --plans <path> --reviews <path>] [feedback] |
| shell-timeout | 10 |
Revise
You are tasked with updating existing implementation plans based on user feedback. You should be skeptical, thorough, and ensure changes are grounded in actual codebase reality.
Input
$ARGUMENTS accepts two shapes:
- Workflow form —
--plans <plan-path> --reviews <review-path>. The orchestrator wires both upstream artifacts in. The plan path is the file to update; the review path carries the findings that drive the edits. Treat the review's content as the feedback.
- Manual form —
<plan-path> "<feedback>", e.g. .rpiv/artifacts/plans/2025-10-16_09-00-00_feature.md "Split Phase 2 into two phases".
Recognize the workflow form by the --plans / --reviews flag tokens; recognize the manual form by the absence of those flags. When both --plans and --reviews are present, read the review FULLY and synthesize its findings as the feedback set.
Metadata
node "${SKILL_DIR}/../_shared/now.mjs"
echo
echo "### recent (read only in case of empty user input)"
echo "recent plans:"
node "${SKILL_DIR}/../_shared/list-recent.mjs" .rpiv/artifacts/plans 10
Flow
- Input → 2. Research if needed → 3. Present approach → 4. Update plan → 5. Sync & review → 6. Follow-ups
The revised artifact stays in .rpiv/artifacts/plans/ for /skill:implement to resume.
Steps
Step 1: Input Handling
When this command is invoked:
-
Parse the input to identify:
- Workflow flags:
--plans <path> (the plan to update) and --reviews <path> (review carrying the findings to apply). Both flags may repeat for multi-artifact upstreams.
- Manual form: positional plan path + free-text feedback.
- Whether the user accidentally provided a review artifact path as the positional plan in the manual form.
-
Handle different input scenarios:
If --plans AND --reviews flags are present (workflow form):
- Take the
--plans value as the plan file path.
- Read the
--reviews artifact FULLY (the review findings are the feedback set).
- Skip directly to substep 3 — no preliminary questions needed.
If a REVIEW artifact path is provided:
`revise` updates implementation plans, not review artifacts.
If you want to act on code-review findings, provide the target plan path plus the changes to make.
Example:
`/skill:revise .rpiv/artifacts/plans/2025-10-16_09-00-00_feature.md "Address the findings from .rpiv/artifacts/reviews/2025-10-16_10-00-00_feature.md by tightening validation in Phase 2 and expanding success criteria."`
Wait for user input.
If NO plan file provided, branch on the recent plans: listing in the Metadata block:
- Empty — no plans under
.rpiv/artifacts/plans/; tell the user and suggest running /skill:plan first.
- Exactly one entry — confirm with
ask_user_question: "Revise this plan?" with options "Revise <filename> (Recommended)" and "Pick a different path".
- Two or more entries — present the top 4 filenames as
ask_user_question options.
If the user is coming from /skill:code-review, also ask which findings should change the plan. Wait for user selection, then re-check for feedback.
If plan file provided but NO feedback:
I've found the plan at {path}. What changes would you like to make?
For example:
- "Add a phase for migration handling"
- "Update the success criteria to include performance tests"
- "Adjust the scope to exclude feature X"
- "Split Phase 2 into two separate phases"
Wait for user input.
If BOTH plan file AND feedback provided:
- Proceed to substep 3 — no preliminary questions needed.
-
Read the existing plan file COMPLETELY:
- Use the Read tool WITHOUT limit/offset parameters
- Understand the current structure, phases, and scope
- Note the success criteria and implementation approach
-
Understand the requested changes:
- Parse what the user wants to add/modify/remove
- Identify if changes require codebase research
- Determine scope of the update
Step 2: Research If Needed
Only spawn research tasks if the changes require new technical understanding.
If the user's feedback requires understanding new code patterns or validating assumptions:
-
Spawn parallel agents for research using the Agent tool:
For code investigation:
- Use the codebase-locator agent to find relevant files
- Use the codebase-analyzer agent to understand implementation details
- Use the codebase-pattern-finder agent to find similar patterns
For historical context:
- Use the artifacts-locator agent to find related research or decisions in
.rpiv/artifacts/
- Use the artifacts-analyzer agent to extract insights from documents
Be EXTREMELY specific about directories:
- Include full path context in prompts
-
Read any new files identified by research:
- Read them FULLY into the main context
- Cross-reference with the plan requirements
-
Wait for ALL agents to complete before proceeding
Step 3: Present Understanding and Approach
Before making changes, confirm your understanding:
Based on your feedback, I understand you want to:
- {Change 1 with specific detail}
- {Change 2 with specific detail}
My research found:
- {Relevant code pattern or constraint}
- {Important discovery that affects the change}
I plan to update the plan by:
1. {Specific modification to make}
2. {Another modification}
Does this align with your intent?
Use the ask_user_question tool to confirm before editing. Question: "{Summary of planned modifications}. Proceed with these edits?". Header: "Changes". Options: "Proceed (Recommended)" (Apply the planned changes to the existing plan); "Adjust approach" (Modify what will be changed before editing); "Show me first" (Show the exact text changes before applying).
Step 4: Update the Plan
-
Make focused, precise edits to the existing plan:
- Use the Edit tool for surgical changes
- NEVER use Write tool - plan files already exist, use Edit tool only
- Maintain the existing structure unless explicitly changing it
- Keep all file:line references accurate
- Update success criteria if needed
-
Ensure consistency:
- If adding a new phase, ensure it follows the existing pattern
- If modifying scope, update "What We're NOT Doing" section
- If changing approach, update "Implementation Approach" section
- Maintain the distinction between automated vs manual success criteria
- Uncheck modified work. When editing the body of a phase that already carries
- [x] checkmarks, change - [x] back to - [ ] for every item whose acceptance is no longer guaranteed by the prior implementation (changed steps, changed success criteria, new sub-steps). Leave checkmarks intact only on items whose existing implementation still satisfies the revised criteria. This is load-bearing: /skill:implement trusts checkmarks when resuming a plan, so a stale - [x] on a rewritten phase silently skips the new work whenever the next-step Phase {N} arg is dropped.
- If the plan has YAML frontmatter, set
last_updated to <iso> from the Metadata block; set last_updated_by to your name. Copy the offset verbatim — do not reformat.
-
Preserve quality standards:
- Include specific file paths and line numbers for new content
- Write measurable success criteria
- Use project's build/test commands (
make, npm, etc.) for automated verification
- Keep language clear and actionable
Step 5: Sync and Review
- Present the changes made:
Plan updated at `.rpiv/artifacts/plans/{filename}.md`
Changes made:
- {Specific change 1}
- {Specific change 2}
The updated plan now:
- {Key improvement}
- {Another improvement}
Let me know if you want further adjustments — otherwise chain forward.
---
💬 Follow-up: describe further plan changes in chat — each `/skill:revise` call appends another timestamped Follow-up section, history is preserved.
**Next step:** `/skill:implement .rpiv/artifacts/plans/{filename}.md Phase {N}` — resume execution at the affected phase (or omit `Phase {N}` to run all phases sequentially).
> 🆕 Tip: start a fresh session with `/new` first — chained skills work best with a clean context window.
Step 6: Handle Follow-ups
- Each invocation appends history. Every
/skill:revise call adds another timestamped Follow-up section — do not collapse history. Prior phase decisions stay visible.
- Bump frontmatter. Update
last_updated + last_updated_by; set last_updated_note: "<one-line summary of revision>".
- Surgical edits only. Make precise edits to specific phases or success criteria — not wholesale rewrites. Preserve good content that doesn't need changing.
- When to re-invoke instead. For deep architectural changes, the upstream design or research is the right place to revise — re-run those rather than expanding revise's scope. The previous block's
Next step: stays valid for the existing plan.
Important Guidelines
-
Be Skeptical:
- Don't blindly accept change requests that seem problematic
- Question vague feedback - ask for clarification
- Use AskUserQuestion tool for structured clarification when there are multiple valid approaches
- Verify technical feasibility with code research
- Point out potential conflicts with existing plan phases
-
Be Surgical:
- Make precise edits, not wholesale rewrites
- Preserve good content that doesn't need changing
- Only research what's necessary for the specific changes
- Don't over-engineer the updates
-
Be Thorough:
- Read the entire existing plan before making changes
- Research code patterns if changes require new technical understanding
- Ensure updated sections maintain quality standards
- Verify success criteria are still measurable
-
Be Interactive:
- Confirm understanding before making changes
- Show what you plan to change before doing it
- Allow course corrections
- Don't disappear into research without communicating
-
Track Progress:
- Update todos as you complete research
- Mark tasks complete when done
-
No Open Questions:
- If the requested change raises questions, ASK
- Research or get clarification immediately
- Do NOT update the plan with unresolved questions
- Every change must be complete and actionable
Success Criteria Guidelines
When updating success criteria, always maintain the two-category structure:
-
Automated Verification (can be run by execution agents):
- Commands that can be run:
make test, npm run lint, etc.
- Specific files that should exist
- Code compilation/type checking
-
Manual Verification (requires human testing):
- UI/UX functionality
- Performance under real conditions
- Edge cases that are hard to automate
- User acceptance criteria
Subagent Invocation Best Practices
When spawning research agents:
- Only spawn if truly needed - don't research for simple changes
- Parallel dispatch — every
Agent(...) call in the same assistant message (multiple tool_use blocks in one response), never one per turn. Call shape: Agent({ subagent_type: "<agent-name>", description: "<3-5 word task label>", prompt: "<task>" }).
- Each agent should be focused on a specific area
- Provide detailed instructions including:
- Exactly what to search for
- Which directories to focus on
- What information to extract
- Expected output format
- Request specific file:line references in responses
- Wait for all agents to complete before synthesizing
- Verify agent results - if something seems off, spawn follow-up agents
Example Interaction Flows
Scenario 1: User provides everything upfront
User: /skill:revise .rpiv/artifacts/plans/2025-10-16_09-00-00_feature.md - add phase for error handling
Assistant: {Reads plan, researches error handling patterns, updates plan}
Scenario 2: User provides just plan file
User: /skill:revise .rpiv/artifacts/plans/2025-10-16_09-00-00_feature.md
Assistant: I've found the plan. What changes would you like to make?
User: Split Phase 2 into two phases - one for backend, one for frontend
Assistant: {Proceeds with update}
Scenario 3: User provides no arguments
User: /skill:revise
Assistant: Which plan would you like to update? Please provide the path...
User: .rpiv/artifacts/plans/2025-10-16_09-00-00_feature.md
Assistant: I've found the plan. What changes would you like to make?
User: Add more specific success criteria
Assistant: {Proceeds with update}
Scenario 4: User passes a review artifact instead of a plan
User: /skill:revise .rpiv/artifacts/reviews/2025-10-16_10-00-00_feature.md
Assistant: `revise` updates implementation plans, not review artifacts. Please provide the target plan path plus the changes to make.
User: /skill:revise .rpiv/artifacts/plans/2025-10-16_09-00-00_feature.md "Address the review findings by splitting Phase 2 and adding validation coverage"
Assistant: {Proceeds with update}