| name | project-brain |
| description | Triggers (all require explicit user request — do NOT activate just because a brain/ folder exists):
(1) The user wants to set up project-level memory ("set up project brain", "scaffold project context", "init project brain", "建项目脑").
(2) The user is in a directory containing brain/ AND explicitly asks to resume / continue / load the project / check status / "what's the state of this project" / "继续这个项目".
(3) The user signals window switch / context compaction ("switch windows", "context's getting full", "I'll head out", "压缩了", "切窗口") — write a HANDOFF before they leave.
(4) The user says "update the project brain" / "let's record this" / "更新项目脑" — propose a list with reasons; user approves per item.
(5) The user mentions multiple parallel workstreams / 多线程项目 / 多任务并行 — enable Multi-workstream Mode (METHODOLOGY §3.5).
Do NOT auto-activate from casual conversation — explicit user request required. See METHODOLOGY.md.
|
| allowed-tools | ["Read","Write","Edit","Bash","Glob","Grep"] |
project-brain
A folder structure + collaboration protocol for persistent project context across AI sessions. Use it to scaffold a brain/ folder in the user's project, resume work from an existing one, or update entries when work happens.
When to invoke this skill
| User signal | Workflow |
|---|
| "set up project brain" / "scaffold project" / "建项目脑" / "init project context" | Kick-off — see §1 |
User is in a directory containing brain/ AND explicitly says "load" / "resume" / "what's the status" / "继续这个项目" | Startup — see §2 |
| User says "switch windows" / "context's getting full" / "I'll head out" / "压缩了" / "切窗口" | Handoff — see §3 |
| User says "update the project brain" / "let's record this" / "更新项目脑" | Update — see §4 |
Activation boundary (important): Do not activate just because a brain/ folder exists in the current directory. Casual conversation that happens to occur inside a project does not require this skill — only explicit user requests do. This is intentional: the methodology refuses to auto-monitor or auto-trigger; user judgment decides when to engage.
Core principles (always honored)
- Tiered trust on
brain/ writes (v2.6, METHODOLOGY §4.1): STATUS / HANDOFF / mechanical MAP registrations — write directly after the work lands, then announce what was written in the same reply (git is the review surface; silent writes are forbidden at every tier). DECISIONS / PROJECT / structural MAP changes — always ask first.
- Judgment Division: the user decides "should we record now"; the AI decides "what specifically to record"; the user reviews. Don't push specialized judgments back to the user ("which files do you want me to update?").
- DECISIONS gentle inquiry: when something feels decided, ask "does this count as decided?" — don't assert "we decided X."
- Multi-workstream: if
brain/ has multiple STATUS_<workstream>.md files, don't guess this window's workstream — ask the user.
§1 New project kick-off
When the user wants to scaffold:
- Confirm applicability: multi-module / long-lived / cross-session work? If a one-off script — say "this might be over-engineering for this project" and let the user override.
- Confirm single or multi-workstream: most projects are single-workstream (default). If the project has parallel independent workstreams (dev + ops + outreach kind of project), ask the user to list workstream names.
- Run scaffold:
bash "${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/scripts/scaffold.sh" <user-project-root> (defaults to all four AI adapters: Claude, Cursor, Copilot, AGENTS.md). Add --lang zh if the project will be documented in Chinese — gives Chinese brain/ templates + Chinese CLAUDE.md (other adapters stay English regardless, since they're consumed by AI tools, not humans).
- Walk the user through
brain/PROJECT.md on day one — fill the one-line definition + "what we explicitly DON'T do." Don't let this drift into the future.
- Scan placeholders:
grep -rn "⚠️ TODO ⚠️" <user-project>/brain/ — go through with the user. Empty fields should be intentional.
- First DECISIONS entry: append "establishing project-brain" with rejected alternatives, so this file is used from day one.
§2 Startup (entering a project that already has brain/)
Single-workstream (only STATUS.md):
- Read
brain/MAP.md
- Read
brain/STATUS.md
- If
brain/HANDOFF.md exists, read it
- Brief report: project recognized + current progress + last blocker
Multi-workstream (multiple STATUS_<workstream>.md):
- Read shared files:
brain/MAP.md + brain/PROJECT.md
- Don't guess — ask: "I see this is a multi-workstream project with [list workstreams]. Which one does this window work on?"
- After the user answers, read corresponding
brain/STATUS_<workstream>.md + brain/HANDOFF_<workstream>.md
- Brief report
Universal discipline: if cwd switches to another project mid-session, re-read the new project's files; if the user switches workstreams in the same window, re-read the new workstream's files. Don't carry over memory.
§3 Handoff (user signaling window switch)
When the user says they're switching windows / context is getting full / heading out:
- Archive the existing HANDOFF first (if one exists):
git mv brain/HANDOFF.md brain/handoffs/$(date +%Y-%m-%d-%H%M).md
(For multi-workstream: brain/HANDOFF_<current>.md → brain/handoffs/<current>/....)
- Write a fresh
brain/HANDOFF.md capturing:
- Why the window-switch (context limit / break / refocus)
- Current state at this exact moment
- Where the next session should pick up
- Things still in head not yet written down — the unique value of HANDOFF (hunches, half-tried approaches, weird debugging observations)
- Keep it short. If STATUS was just overwritten, HANDOFF can be near-empty.
§4 Update workflow
When the user says "update the project brain":
- Look back at what happened in this session
- Propose a list with reasons — for each candidate file, say what to write and why:
- STATUS overwrite: now at [X], next [Y]. Reason: you said "that's it"
- DECISIONS: about to append? Reason: that section felt like it landed — does this count as decided?
- MAP §5 register: new file at brain/topics/systems/[X].md. Reason: doc we just wrote
- HANDOFF: not needed — you didn't say switch windows
- Wait for user's approval per item — they may say "OK, all of them" / "skip DECISIONS, that's still discussion" / "today, just STATUS"
- Write only the approved updates
Never reverse this: don't ask the user "which files do you want to update?" That hands the wrong layer of judgment to the wrong person.
Reference
- Full methodology (the why, all 16 traps, evolution story):
${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/METHODOLOGY.md
- Templates (what
scaffold.sh copies): ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/templates/
- Doctor (structural health check):
bash "${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/scripts/doctor.sh" <user-project-root>
- Public repo: https://github.com/Ethan-YS/project-brain