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openspec-continue-change
// 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.
// 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.
Build and troubleshoot native Node.js addons using node-gyp. Use when working with native addon compilation, binding.gyp configuration, NODE_MODULE_VERSION mismatch errors, Electron native module rebuilds, or packages like bcrypt, node-sass, sqlite3, sharp. Covers platform-specific build setup (Linux/macOS/Windows), N-API configuration, cross-compilation, and pre-built binary distribution.
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.
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.
Sync delta specs from a change to main specs. Use when the user wants to update main specs with changes from a delta spec, without archiving the change.
| name | openspec-continue-change |
| description | 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. |
Continue working on a change by creating the next artifact.
Input: Optionally specify a change name. If omitted, MUST prompt for available changes.
Steps
If no change name provided, prompt for selection
Run openspec list --json to get available changes sorted by most recently modified. Then use the AskUserQuestion tool to let the user select which change to work on.
Present the top 3-4 most recently modified changes as options, showing:
schema field if present, otherwise "spec-driven")lastModified field)Mark the most recently modified change as "(Recommended)" since it's likely what the user wants to continue.
IMPORTANT: Do NOT guess or auto-select a change. Always let the user choose.
Check current status
openspec status --change "<name>" --json
Parse the JSON to understand current state. The response includes:
schemaName: The workflow schema being used (e.g., "spec-driven", "tdd")artifacts: Array of artifacts with their status ("done", "ready", "blocked")isComplete: Boolean indicating if all artifacts are completeAct based on status:
If all artifacts are complete (isComplete: true):
If artifacts are ready to create (status shows artifacts with status: "ready"):
status: "ready" from the status outputopenspec instructions <artifact-id> --change "<name>" --json
If no artifacts are ready (all blocked):
After creating an artifact, show progress
openspec status --change "<name>"
Output
After each invocation, show:
Artifact Creation Guidelines
The artifact types and their purpose depend on the schema. Use the instruction field from the instructions output to understand what to create.
Common artifact patterns:
spec-driven schema (proposal → specs → design → tasks):
tdd schema (spec → tests → implementation → docs):
For other schemas, follow the instruction field from the CLI output.
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