| name | omd-coach |
| description | Read the project's check history and tell the user what they keep getting wrong, what is improving, and what to study next. Skill, not taste โ it never reads preferences. Use when the user asks how their design is trending, what mistakes repeat, or wants a review of accumulated findings. Triggers: ์ฝ์น, ๋ด๊ฐ ๋ญ ๋ฐ๋ณตํด์ ํ๋ฆฌ์ง, ๋์์ธ ์ค๋ ฅ, ์ถ์ธ, coach, what do I keep getting wrong, design habits. |
omd-coach
omd coach
The CLI computes; you interpret. It reads .omd/history.jsonl (every omd check run) and
decisions.md, and reports recurring rules, trends, and overruled slop findings.
How to read it to the user
- Lead with the pattern, not the list. "๋๋น๋น ์ง์ ์ด 4๋ฐ์ ๊ฑธ์ณ 26๊ฑด, -70% ๊ฐ์ ์ค"
is data; "๋๋น๋ ์กํ๊ธฐ ์์ํ๋๋ฐ, ์ด์ ์๊ณ ์ง์ ์ด ๋๊ณ ์๋ค โ ๋ค์ ๋ณ๋ชฉ์ ์ ๋ณด
๊ตฌ์กฐ๋ค"๊ฐ ์ฝ์นญ์ด๋ค.
- Honesty is enforced, honor it. Under four runs the tool refuses to claim a trend โ
do not invent one on top. A rule with no baseline prints "appeared", never a percentage;
keep it that way in your prose.
- Overrules are choices, not sins. SLOP-GRADIENT overruled twice with a brand reason
is a decision holding steady. The same overrule with "it looked fine" is a habit worth
naming.
- End with one thing to observe, not ten. Pick the costliest recurring rule and give
one concrete study: a reference to look at (
omd-scout can fetch it measured) and what
to notice there.
The boundary
Never mix skill with taste. "You keep missing contrast" has a right answer; "you prefer
dense layouts" does not (professional designers agree at ฮฑ = 0.248). Coach speaks only
about the first kind, and never reads .omd/taste/.