| name | to-tickets |
| description | Break a plan, spec, or the current conversation into a set of tracer-bullet tickets, each declaring its blocking edges, published per the tracker conventions — ticket files with blocked-by edges, or native blocking links on a real tracker. |
| disable-model-invocation | true |
To Tickets
Break a plan, spec, or conversation into a set of tickets — tracer-bullet vertical slices, each declaring the tickets that block it.
Publish per the tracker skill's conventions (or the tracker the project's CLAUDE.md declares).
Process
1. Gather context
Work from whatever is already in the conversation context. If the user passes a reference (a spec path, an issue number or URL) as an argument, fetch it and read its full body and comments.
2. Explore the codebase (optional)
If you have not already explored the codebase, do so to understand the current state of the code. Ticket titles and descriptions should use the vocabulary from CONTEXT.md, and respect ADRs in decisions/ in the area you're touching.
Look for opportunities to prefactor the code to make the implementation easier. "Make the change easy, then make the easy change."
3. Draft vertical slices
Break the work into tracer bullet tickets.
- Each slice cuts a narrow but COMPLETE path through every layer (schema, API, UI, tests) — vertical, NOT a horizontal slice of one layer
- A completed slice is demoable or verifiable on its own
- Each slice is sized to fit in a single fresh context window
- Any prefactoring should be done first
Give each ticket its blocking edges — the other tickets that must complete before it can start. A ticket with no blockers can start immediately.
Only ticket what you can specify precisely now. If part of the work is still too foggy to state as a slice, leave it in the spec's Further Notes and ticket it when the frontier reaches it.
Wide refactors are the exception to vertical slicing. A wide refactor is one mechanical change — rename a column, retype a shared symbol — whose blast radius fans across the whole codebase, so a single edit breaks thousands of call sites at once and no vertical slice can land green. Don't force it into a tracer bullet; sequence it as expand–contract. First expand: add the new form beside the old so nothing breaks. Then migrate the call sites over in batches sized by blast radius (per package, per directory), each batch its own ticket blocked by the expand, keeping CI green batch to batch because the old form still exists. Finally contract: delete the old form once no caller remains, in a ticket blocked by every migrate batch. When even the batches can't stay green alone, keep the sequence but let them share an integration branch that all block a final integrate-and-verify ticket — green is promised only there.
4. Quiz the user
Present the proposed breakdown as a numbered list. For each ticket, show:
- Title: short descriptive name
- Blocked by: which other tickets (if any) must complete first
- What it delivers: the end-to-end behaviour this ticket makes work
Ask the user:
- Does the granularity feel right? (too coarse / too fine)
- Are the blocking edges correct — does each ticket only depend on tickets that genuinely gate it?
- Should any tickets be merged or split further?
Iterate until the user approves the breakdown.
5. Publish the tickets
Publish per the tracker skill: one NN-<slug>.md per ticket in the feature's directory, numbered in dependency order (blockers first), each using the template below. Do NOT modify the spec.
(On a repo whose CLAUDE.md declares a real tracker like GitHub Issues, publish one issue per ticket instead, using the platform's native blocking / sub-issue relationships.)
status: open
blocked-by: [NN] # omit when nothing blocks it
What to build
The end-to-end behaviour this ticket makes work, from the user's perspective — not layer-by-layer implementation.
Acceptance criteria
Avoid specific file paths or code snippets — they go stale fast. Exception: if a prototype produced a snippet that encodes a decision more precisely than prose can (state machine, reducer, schema, type shape), inline it and note briefly that it came from a prototype. Trim to the decision-rich parts — not a working demo, just the important bits.
Work the frontier one ticket at a time with /mx:implement, clearing context between tickets. Independent frontier tickets can run in parallel via /mx:dispatch.