| name | technical-documentation |
| description | Build and review high-quality technical docs as well as agent instruction files in your repository. |
| license | MIT |
| metadata | {"source":"https://github.com/vincentkoc/dotskills"} |
Technical Documentation
Purpose
Produce and review technical documentation that is clear, actionable, and maintainable for both humans and agents, including contributor-governance files and agent instruction files.
When to use
- Creating or overhauling docs in an existing product/codebase (brownfield).
- Building evergreen docs meant to stay accurate and reusable over time.
- Reviewing doc diffs for structure, clarity, and operational correctness.
- Running full-repo documentation audits that must include both governance files and product docs surfaces (
docs/, README*, .md/.mdx/.mdc, Fern/Sphinx/Mintlify-style sources).
- Updating or reviewing AGENTS.md and/or CONTRIBUTING.md to keep agent and contributor workflows aligned with current repo practices.
- Improving repository onboarding/docs that include contribution instructions, issue templates, PR flow, and review gates.
- Designing governance documentation strategy for repos with alias instruction files (for example
CLAUDE.md, AGENT.md, .cursorrules, .cursor/rules/*, .agent/, .agents/, .pi/) where AGENTS.md is treated as canonical when present and aliases should be kept as compatibility surfaces.
- Diagnosing agent-file drift where teams had to prompt iteratively to surface missing files, broken commands, or policy conflicts.
- Applying repository-specific documentation overlays, including OpenClaw page-type, docs IA, preservation, and validation rules when present.
Workflow
- Classify task:
build or review; context: brownfield or evergreen.
- Inventory full documentation scope early (governance + product docs): AGENTS/CONTRIBUTING/aliases plus docs directories, framework sources, and root/module READMEs.
- Detect multilingual scope (README/docs in multiple languages) and define required parity level.
- Read
references/agent-and-contributing.md for agent instruction and CONTRIBUTING.md workflow rules (inventory, canonical/alias mapping, dual-mode balance, deliverable standards, and precedence/conflict handling).
- Read
references/principles.md for the governing ruleset (Matt Palmer & OpenAI).
- For OpenClaw docs work, read
references/openclaw.md before the build/review playbook.
- For build tasks, follow
references/build.md.
- For review tasks, follow
references/review.md and proactively detect issues without waiting for repeated prompts.
- For complex or high-risk tasks (build or review), it is acceptable to run longer, deeper, and more exhaustive investigations when needed for confidence.
- When available, use sub-agents for bounded parallel discovery/review work, then merge outputs into one coherent final deliverable.
- Use
references/tooling.md when platform/tooling choices affect recommendations.
- Run a proactive issue sweep for both governance and docs-content surfaces, and fix high-confidence defects in the same pass unless explicitly asked for report-only mode.
- In brownfield mode, prioritize compatibility with current docs IA, tooling, and release state.
- In evergreen mode, prioritize timeless wording, update strategy, and durable structure.
- Return deliverables plus validation notes, parity status, and remaining gaps.
Sub-agent orchestration guidance
Prefer sub-agents when the repo is large or the requested change set is broad; use them by default for repo-wide, multi-framework, or high-conflict work.
inventory-agent -> agents/inventory-agent.md (fast / Claude haiku): file/config discovery, coverage map, and missing-path checks.
governance-agent -> agents/governance-agent.md (thinking / Claude sonnet): AGENTS/CONTRIBUTING/alias precedence, conflicts, and policy drift.
docs-framework-agent -> agents/docs-framework-agent.md (thinking / Claude sonnet): framework config, relative path base, and file-path vs URL-path mapping checks.
synthesis-agent -> agents/synthesis-agent.md (long / Claude opus): merge sub-agent outputs into one prioritized fix plan and unified precedence model.
Inputs
- Doc type (tutorial, how-to, reference, explanation) and audience.
- File scope or diff scope.
- Docs framework/tooling constraints (Fern, Mintlify, Sphinx, etc.).
- Build/review mode and brownfield/evergreen intent.
- Target agent and human compatibility intent.
- Docs framework surfaces in scope (for example Fern, Sphinx, Mintlify, Markdown/MDX/MDC/RST/RSC files).
- Desired investigation depth/time budget (quick pass vs exhaustive review).
- Execution mode (
single-agent or sub-agent-assisted when available).
- Remediation mode (
apply-fixes by default, or report-only when requested).
- Multilingual scope: source-of-truth language, target locales, and parity expectations.
- Repository-specific overlay constraints, if any.
Outputs
- Updated draft or review findings with clear next actions.
- Validation notes (what was checked, what remains).
- Navigation/maintenance recommendations for long-term quality.
- Governance-doc alignment summary when AGENTS/CONTRIBUTING were touched.
- Agent instruction-surface map (primary file, alias files, Codex/Claude/Cursor handling plan).
- Documentation-surface coverage map (what was reviewed under
/docs, README hierarchy, and framework-specific source trees).
- Autodetected issue list with applied fixes (or explicit report-only findings).
- Delegation notes when sub-agents were used (scope delegated and how findings were merged).
- Multilingual parity note (in-sync, partial with rationale, or intentionally divergent).
- Repository-specific overlay notes when one was used.