with one click
openspec-apply-change
// Implement tasks from an OpenSpec change. Use when the user wants to start implementing, continue implementation, or work through tasks.
// Implement tasks from an OpenSpec change. Use when the user wants to start implementing, continue implementation, or work through tasks.
Archive a completed change in the experimental workflow. Use when the user wants to finalize and archive a change after implementation is complete.
Archive multiple completed changes at once. Use when archiving several parallel changes.
Continue working on an OpenSpec change by creating the next artifact. Use when the user wants to progress their change, create the next artifact, or continue their workflow.
Enter explore mode - a thinking partner for exploring ideas, investigating problems, and clarifying requirements. Use when the user wants to think through something before or during a change.
Fast-forward through OpenSpec artifact creation. Use when the user wants to quickly create all artifacts needed for implementation without stepping through each one individually.
Start a new OpenSpec change using the experimental artifact workflow. Use when the user wants to create a new feature, fix, or modification with a structured step-by-step approach.
| name | openspec-apply-change |
| description | Implement tasks from an OpenSpec change. Use when the user wants to start implementing, continue implementation, or work through tasks. |
| license | MIT |
| compatibility | Requires openspec CLI. |
| metadata | {"author":"openspec","version":"1.0","generatedBy":"1.0.0"} |
Implement tasks from an OpenSpec change.
Input: Optionally specify a change name. If omitted, check if it can be inferred from conversation context. If vague or ambiguous you MUST prompt for available changes.
Steps
Select the change
If a name is provided, use it. Otherwise:
openspec list --json to get available changes and use the AskUserQuestion tool to let the
user selectAlways announce: "Using change: " and how to override (e.g., /opsx:apply <other>).
Check status to understand the schema
openspec status --change "<name>" --json
Parse the JSON to understand:
schemaName: The workflow being used (e.g., "spec-driven", "tdd")Get apply instructions
openspec instructions apply --change "<name>" --json
This returns:
Handle states:
state: "blocked" (missing artifacts): show message, suggest using openspec-continue-changestate: "all_done": congratulate, suggest archiveRead context files
Read the files listed in contextFiles from the apply instructions output.
The files depend on the schema being used:
Show current progress
Display:
Implement tasks (loop until done or blocked)
For each pending task:
- [ ] ā - [x]Pause if:
On completion or pause, show status
Display:
Output During Implementation
## Implementing: <change-name> (schema: <schema-name>)
Working on task 3/7: <task description>
[...implementation happening...]
ā Task complete
Working on task 4/7: <task description>
[...implementation happening...]
ā Task complete
Output On Completion
## Implementation Complete
**Change:** <change-name>
**Schema:** <schema-name>
**Progress:** 7/7 tasks complete ā
### Completed This Session
- [x] Task 1
- [x] Task 2
...
All tasks complete! Ready to archive this change.
Output On Pause (Issue Encountered)
## Implementation Paused
**Change:** <change-name>
**Schema:** <schema-name>
**Progress:** 4/7 tasks complete
### Issue Encountered
<description of the issue>
**Options:**
1. <option 1>
2. <option 2>
3. Other approach
What would you like to do?
Guardrails
Fluid Workflow Integration
This skill supports the "actions on a change" model: