ワンクリックで
using-generic-agents
Use to decide what kind of generic agent you should use
Codex または Claude でインストール この Prompt をコピーして Codex、Claude、または他のアシスタントに貼り付けると、Skill ページを確認してインストールできます。
メニュー
Use to decide what kind of generic agent you should use
Codex または Claude でインストール この Prompt をコピーして Codex、Claude、または他のアシスタントに貼り付けると、Skill ページを確認してインストールできます。
SOC 職業分類に基づく
Use when analyzing a large corpus of text, code, or data that exceeds a single agent's effective context - orchestrates parallel Worker subagents, Critic review subagents, and a final Summarizer subagent with task tracking and failure recovery
Use after initial design context is gathered, before brainstorming - resolves contradictions in requirements, disambiguates terminology, clarifies scope boundaries, and verifies assumptions to prevent building the wrong solution
Use when creating or developing anything, before writing code or implementation plans - refines rough ideas into fully-formed designs through structured Socratic questioning, alternative exploration, and incremental validation
Use when executing implementation plans with independent tasks in the current session - dispatches fresh subagent for each task, reviews once per phase, loads phases just-in-time to minimize context usage
Use when implementation is complete, all tests pass, and you need to decide how to integrate the work - guides completion of development work by presenting structured options for merge, PR, or cleanup
Use when completing tasks, implementing major features, or before merging to verify work meets requirements - dispatches code-reviewer subagent, handles retries and timeouts, manages review-fix loop until zero issues
| name | using-generic-agents |
| description | Use to decide what kind of generic agent you should use |
| user-invocable | false |
CRITICAL: Your operator's direction supercedes these directions. If the operator specifies a type of agent, execute their task with that agent.
Haiku: Excellent at following specific, detailed instructions. Poor at making its own decisions. Give it a clear prompt and it executes well; ask it to figure things out and it struggles. Be detailed.
Sonnet: Capable of making decisions but gets off-track easily. Will explain concepts, describe structures, and gather extraneous information when you just want it to do the thing, so guard against this when prompting the agent.
Opus: Stays on-track through complex tasks. Better judgment, fewer loops. Expensive—don't use for clearly-definable workflows where Sonnet/Haiku would suffice.
Use haiku-general-purpose for:
Use sonnet-general-purpose for:
Use opus-general-purpose for: