一键导入
tdd
Test-driven development. Use when the user wants to build features or fix bugs test-first, mentions "red-green-refactor", or wants integration tests.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
菜单
Test-driven development. Use when the user wants to build features or fix bugs test-first, mentions "red-green-refactor", or wants integration tests.
用 Codex 或 Claude 帮你安装 复制这段 Prompt,粘贴到 Codex、Claude 或其他助手里,让它检查 Skill 页面并帮你完成安装。
基于 SOC 职业分类
Work a feature's ticket DAG in parallel — one orchestrator fans independent frontier tickets out to parallel worker agents and integrates them on the feature branch until the feature ships. Use when a ticketed feature has independent frontier tickets, the user says "dispatch" or wants tickets worked in parallel, or when another skill routes parallel frontier work here.
Which mx skill or flow fits the current situation — a router over the mx workflow.
Run commands in tmux whenever they run long or need eyes on them — anything expected to take more than ~30–60s (training runs, ML experiments, builds, servers), anything worth observing mid-run (progress logs, monitoring output), and anything interactive (sudo prompts, REPLs, wizards), locally or on a remote host. Always reach for this instead of a fire-and-forget Bash call in those cases — the human can attach and step in at any time.
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.
Review and update Claude Code's auto-approved command allowlist based on Bash commands that triggered permission prompts in recent sessions.
Turn the current conversation into a spec and publish it to the project issue tracker — no interview, just synthesis of what you've already discussed.
| name | tdd |
| description | Test-driven development. Use when the user wants to build features or fix bugs test-first, mentions "red-green-refactor", or wants integration tests. |
TDD is the red → green loop. This skill is the reference that makes that loop produce tests worth keeping: what a good test is, where tests go, the anti-patterns, and the rules of the loop. Every section applies on every cycle — consult them before and during the loop, not after.
When exploring the codebase, read CONTEXT.md (if it exists) so test names and interface vocabulary match the project's domain language, and respect ADRs in the area you're touching.
Tests verify behavior through public interfaces, not implementation details. Code can change entirely; tests shouldn't. A good test reads like a specification — "user can checkout with valid cart" tells you exactly what capability exists — and survives refactors because it doesn't care about internal structure.
See tests.md for examples and mocking.md for mocking guidelines.
A seam is the public boundary you test at: the interface where you observe behavior without reaching inside. Tests live at seams, never against internals.
Test only at pre-agreed seams. Before writing any test, write down the seams under test and confirm them with the user. No test is written at an unconfirmed seam. You can't test everything — agreeing the seams up front is how testing effort lands on the critical paths and complex logic instead of every edge case.
Ask: "What's the public interface, and which seams should we test?"
expect(add(a, b)).toBe(a + b), a snapshot derived by hand the same way, a constant asserted equal to itself), so it passes by construction and can never disagree with the code. Expected values must come from an independent source of truth — a known-good literal, a worked example, the spec./mx:code-review skill), not the red → green implementation cycle.