| name | ask-user |
| description | You MUST use this before high-stakes architectural decisions, irreversible changes, or when requirements are ambiguous. Runs a decision handshake with the ask_user tool: summarize context, present structured options, collect explicit user choice, then proceed. |
| metadata | {"short-description":"Decision gate for ambiguity and high-stakes choices"} |
Ask User Decision Gate
Use this skill to force explicit user alignment before consequential decisions.
This skill is about decision control, not general chit-chat.
Non-negotiable rule
Invoke ask_user before proceeding when any of the following is true:
- The next step changes architecture, schema, API contracts, deployment strategy, or security posture.
- The work is costly to undo (large refactor, migration, destructive edit, production-facing behavior change).
- Requirements, constraints, or success criteria are unclear, conflicting, or missing.
- Multiple valid options exist and the trade-off is preference-dependent.
- You are about to assume something that can materially change implementation.
Do not skip this gate unless the user has already provided a clear, explicit decision for the exact trade-off.
Agent Protocol Handshake (required)
Follow this handshake in order.
1) Detect boundary
Classify the current step as:
high_stakes
ambiguous
both
clear (no gate needed)
If classification is not clear, continue.
2) Gather evidence first
Before asking, gather context from available tools (read, bash, exa, ref, etc.).
Do not ask the user to decide blind.
3) Synthesize context
Prepare a short neutral summary (3-7 bullets or short paragraph) covering:
- current state
- key constraints
- trade-offs
- recommendation (if any)
4) Ask one focused question
Call ask_user with one decision at a time:
question: concrete decision prompt
context: synthesized summary
options: 2-5 clear choices when possible
allowMultiple: false unless independent selections are genuinely needed
allowFreeform: usually true
displayMode (optional): "overlay" (default) or "inline". Use "inline" when preceding assistant context (summary, trade-offs, recommendation) is essential to the decision and should remain visible — overlays cover the conversation underneath. The user may set a personal default via the PI_ASK_USER_DISPLAY_MODE environment variable; only pass this when you intentionally want to override it for one call.
5) Commit the decision
After response:
- restate the decision in plain language
- state what will be done next
- proceed with implementation
6) Re-open only on new ambiguity
Ask again only if materially new uncertainty appears.
Avoid repetitive confirmation loops.
Anti-overasking guardrails (required)
Apply a strict question budget per decision boundary:
- Max 1
ask_user call per decision boundary in normal cases.
- Max 2
ask_user calls for the same boundary when first response is unclear/cancelled.
- Never ask the same trade-off again without new evidence.
Escalation ladder:
- Attempt 1: structured options + concise context.
- Attempt 2 (only if needed): narrower question with agent recommendation and explicit choices:
Proceed with recommended option
Choose another option (freeform)
Stop for now
After attempt 2:
- If boundary is
high_stakes or both: stop and mark blocked. Do not keep asking.
- If boundary is
ambiguous only and user says “your call” or equivalent: proceed with the most reversible default and state assumptions explicitly.
ask_user payload quality standard
Question quality
Use:
- “Which option should we adopt for X?”
- “Do you want A (fast) or B (safer) for Y?”
Avoid:
- broad/open prompts with no decision boundary
- multiple unrelated decisions in one question
- questions that should be answered by reading code/docs first
Option quality
Options must be:
- mutually understandable
- short and outcome-oriented
- explicit on trade-offs
Good options include a short description when trade-offs are non-obvious.
Recommended patterns
Single-select architecture decision
{
"question": "Which caching strategy should we use for the first release?",
"context": "Current API has p95 latency issues. Redis is fastest but adds infra complexity; in-memory cache is simpler but not shared across instances.",
"options": [
{ "title": "In-memory cache", "description": "Simpler rollout, weaker horizontal consistency" },
{ "title": "Redis cache", "description": "Better consistency and scalability, more ops overhead" }
],
"allowMultiple": false,
"allowFreeform": true
}
Multi-select when decisions are independent
{
"question": "Select the first-wave hardening items to implement now.",
"context": "We can ship quickly with baseline controls, then add targeted hardening. Budget is limited to 1-2 days.",
"options": [
"Rate limiting",
"Audit logging",
"Input schema validation",
"Secrets rotation"
],
"allowMultiple": true,
"allowFreeform": true
}
Anti-patterns
- Asking
ask_user without first gathering context
- Using it for trivial formatting choices
- Forcing options when freeform is clearly better
- Asking the same question repeatedly without new information
- Proceeding with high-stakes implementation after unclear/cancelled answer
If user cancels or answer is unclear
Pause execution and explain what is blocked.
Use at most one narrower follow-up ask_user question (attempt 2).
After that, do not continue asking in a loop:
- for high-stakes decisions: remain blocked until explicit decision
- for ambiguity-only decisions: proceed only if user delegated the choice ("your call")
Additional reference
For full trigger matrix, UX conventions, and extension interaction details, read:
references/ask-user-skill-extension-spec.md