| name | init-project-light |
| description | Use when you need to bootstrap a lightweight project with minimal structure. |
| allowed-tools | Bash(mkdir*), Bash(ls*), Bash(touch*), Read, Write, Edit, Glob, Grep, AskUserQuestion |
| argument-hint | [no arguments — runs in current directory] |
| skill-dependencies | ["init-project-research"] |
Init Project Light
Lightweight project bootstrapper for small projects that don't need the full init-project-research scaffold.
When to Use
- Small document collections (proposals, applications, meeting notes)
- One-off or short-lived projects
- Projects without a code pipeline or Overleaf link
- When the user says "set up something light", "quick init", "organise this folder"
- Any project that doesn't warrant
init-project-research
When NOT to Use — Escalate to init-project-research
- Research papers targeting a journal or conference
- Projects with code, data, or computational pipelines
- Anything that needs Overleaf, git, or a vault atlas entry
Phase 1: Scan
Read everything already in the directory before asking questions.
- List all files and folders (excluding
.claude/, .DS_Store)
- Read text files (
.md, .tex, .bib, .txt) to understand content — respect file size (skip files > 500 lines, note them)
- Build a mental model: what is this project, what's the main output, who's involved?
Goal: Minimise interview questions by inferring answers from existing files.
Phase 2: Interview (2-3 questions max)
Use the available structured-question mechanism. Only ask what you couldn't infer from Phase 1.
Pick from these (skip any you can already answer):
- What is this project? — one sentence (e.g., "PhD research proposal for [University]")
- What's the main output? — document, application, collection of notes, etc.
- Anyone else involved? — names and roles if relevant
If Phase 1 gave you enough, confirm your understanding instead of asking:
"From the files, this looks like [X]. The main output is [Y]. Correct?"
Phase 3: Create CLAUDE.md
Follow the lean-guidance-files rule. Include only:
- Project overview — 2-3 sentences from interview/scan
- People — if collaborators/supervisors exist
- Directory structure — compact tree of what exists
- Conventions — only if detectable (e.g., LaTeX compilation, bibliography style)
- Key context — anything a future session needs to know immediately
Do NOT include:
- Detailed literature notes or reference lists
- Action items or timelines (those go to vault)
- Anything that duplicates global rules
Phase 4: Organise (suggest, don't force)
Based on what's in the directory, suggest lightweight organisation. Present options and wait for approval.
Standard suggestions
| Folder | When to suggest |
|---|
to-sort/ | Multiple unsorted documents exist |
docs/ | Reference materials, guidelines, or background reading present |
archive/ | Old versions or abandoned drafts detected |
Rules
- Never create more than 2-3 folders — this is a light project
- Never move files without explicit approval
- If the existing structure already makes sense, say so and skip this phase
- If there's a
.claude/settings.local.json, leave it. If not, create one with standard permissions.
Standard permissions (.claude/settings.local.json)
{
"permissions": {
"allow": [
"Bash(latexmk *)",
"Bash(ls:*)",
"Bash(mkdir:*)",
"Bash(tree:*)",
"Edit",
"Glob",
"Grep",
"Read",
"Write"
],
"deny": []
}
}
Only create if missing. Never overwrite existing permissions.
Phase 5: Confirmation
Short report:
Set up lightweight project: <name>
Created:
- CLAUDE.md
- [any folders created]
- [.claude/settings.local.json if created]
Skipped (use init-project-research if needed later):
- Git, Overleaf, vault atlas, code scaffold
Cross-References
| Skill | Relationship |
|---|
init-project-research | Escalate to this for full research projects |
update-project-doc | Run later to refresh CLAUDE.md if the project grows |