Merge upstream's ce-brainstorm skip-menu guidance and ce-plan repo-research-analyst integration with local deploy wiring flag additions. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
18 KiB
name, description, argument-hint
| name | description | argument-hint |
|---|---|---|
| ce:brainstorm | Explore requirements and approaches through collaborative dialogue before writing a right-sized requirements document and planning implementation. Use for feature ideas, problem framing, when the user says 'let's brainstorm', or when they want to think through options before deciding what to build. Also use when a user describes a vague or ambitious feature request, asks 'what should we build', 'help me think through X', presents a problem with multiple valid solutions, or seems unsure about scope or direction — even if they don't explicitly ask to brainstorm. | [feature idea or problem to explore] |
Brainstorm a Feature or Improvement
Note: The current year is 2026. Use this when dating requirements documents.
Brainstorming helps answer WHAT to build through collaborative dialogue. It precedes /ce:plan, which answers HOW to build it.
The durable output of this workflow is a requirements document. In other workflows this might be called a lightweight PRD or feature brief. In compound engineering, keep the workflow name brainstorm, but make the written artifact strong enough that planning does not need to invent product behavior, scope boundaries, or success criteria.
This skill does not implement code. It explores, clarifies, and documents decisions for later planning or execution.
Core Principles
- Assess scope first - Match the amount of ceremony to the size and ambiguity of the work.
- Be a thinking partner - Suggest alternatives, challenge assumptions, and explore what-ifs instead of only extracting requirements.
- Resolve product decisions here - User-facing behavior, scope boundaries, and success criteria belong in this workflow. Detailed implementation belongs in planning.
- Keep implementation out of the requirements doc by default - Do not include libraries, schemas, endpoints, file layouts, or code-level design unless the brainstorm itself is inherently about a technical or architectural change.
- Right-size the artifact - Simple work gets a compact requirements document or brief alignment. Larger work gets a fuller document. Do not add ceremony that does not help planning.
- Apply YAGNI to carrying cost, not coding effort - Prefer the simplest approach that delivers meaningful value. Avoid speculative complexity and hypothetical future-proofing, but low-cost polish or delight is worth including when its ongoing cost is small and easy to maintain.
Interaction Rules
- Ask one question at a time - Do not batch several unrelated questions into one message.
- Prefer single-select multiple choice - Use single-select when choosing one direction, one priority, or one next step.
- Use multi-select rarely and intentionally - Use it only for compatible sets such as goals, constraints, non-goals, or success criteria that can all coexist. If prioritization matters, follow up by asking which selected item is primary.
- Use the platform's question tool when available - When asking the user a question, prefer the platform's blocking question tool if one exists (
AskUserQuestionin Claude Code,request_user_inputin Codex,ask_userin Gemini). Otherwise, present numbered options in chat and wait for the user's reply before proceeding.
Output Guidance
- Keep outputs concise - Prefer short sections, brief bullets, and only enough detail to support the next decision.
Feature Description
<feature_description> #$ARGUMENTS </feature_description>
If the feature description above is empty, ask the user: "What would you like to explore? Please describe the feature, problem, or improvement you're thinking about."
Do not proceed until you have a feature description from the user.
Execution Flow
Phase 0: Resume, Assess, and Route
0.1 Resume Existing Work When Appropriate
If the user references an existing brainstorm topic or document, or there is an obvious recent matching *-requirements.md file in docs/brainstorms/:
- Read the document
- Confirm with the user before resuming: "Found an existing requirements doc for [topic]. Should I continue from this, or start fresh?"
- If resuming, summarize the current state briefly, continue from its existing decisions and outstanding questions, and update the existing document instead of creating a duplicate
0.2 Assess Whether Brainstorming Is Needed
Clear requirements indicators:
- Specific acceptance criteria provided
- Referenced existing patterns to follow
- Described exact expected behavior
- Constrained, well-defined scope
If requirements are already clear: Keep the interaction brief. Confirm understanding and present concise next-step options rather than forcing a long brainstorm. Only write a short requirements document when a durable handoff to planning or later review would be valuable. Skip Phase 1.1 and 1.2 entirely — go straight to Phase 1.3 or Phase 3.
0.3 Assess Scope
Use the feature description plus a light repo scan to classify the work:
- Lightweight - small, well-bounded, low ambiguity
- Standard - normal feature or bounded refactor with some decisions to make
- Deep - cross-cutting, strategic, or highly ambiguous
If the scope is unclear, ask one targeted question to disambiguate and then proceed.
Phase 1: Understand the Idea
1.1 Existing Context Scan
Scan the repo before substantive brainstorming. Match depth to scope:
Lightweight — Search for the topic, check if something similar already exists, and move on.
Standard and Deep — Two passes:
Constraint Check — Check project instruction files (AGENTS.md, and CLAUDE.md only if retained as compatibility context) for workflow, product, or scope constraints that affect the brainstorm. If these add nothing, move on.
Topic Scan — Search for relevant terms. Read the most relevant existing artifact if one exists (brainstorm, plan, spec, skill, feature doc). Skim adjacent examples covering similar behavior.
If nothing obvious appears after a short scan, say so and continue. Do not drift into technical planning — avoid inspecting tests, migrations, deployment, or low-level architecture unless the brainstorm is itself about a technical decision.
1.2 Product Pressure Test
Before generating approaches, challenge the request to catch misframing. Match depth to scope:
Lightweight:
- Is this solving the real user problem?
- Are we duplicating something that already covers this?
- Is there a clearly better framing with near-zero extra cost?
Standard:
- Is this the right problem, or a proxy for a more important one?
- What user or business outcome actually matters here?
- What happens if we do nothing?
- Is there a nearby framing that creates more user value without more carrying cost? If so, what complexity does it add?
- Given the current project state, user goal, and constraints, what is the single highest-leverage move right now: the request as framed, a reframing, one adjacent addition, a simplification, or doing nothing?
- Favor moves that compound value, reduce future carrying cost, or make the product meaningfully more useful or compelling
- Use the result to sharpen the conversation, not to bulldoze the user's intent
Deep — Standard questions plus:
- What durable capability should this create in 6-12 months?
- Does this move the product toward that, or is it only a local patch?
1.3 Collaborative Dialogue
Use the platform's blocking question tool when available (see Interaction Rules). Otherwise, present numbered options in chat and wait for the user's reply before proceeding.
Guidelines:
- Ask questions one at a time
- Prefer multiple choice when natural options exist
- Prefer single-select when choosing one direction, one priority, or one next step
- Use multi-select only for compatible sets that can all coexist; if prioritization matters, ask which selected item is primary
- Start broad (problem, users, value) then narrow (constraints, exclusions, edge cases)
- Clarify the problem frame, validate assumptions, and ask about success criteria
- Make requirements concrete enough that planning will not need to invent behavior
- Surface dependencies or prerequisites only when they materially affect scope
- Resolve product decisions here; leave technical implementation choices for planning
- Bring ideas, alternatives, and challenges instead of only interviewing
Exit condition: Continue until the idea is clear OR the user explicitly wants to proceed.
Phase 2: Explore Approaches
If multiple plausible directions remain, propose 2-3 concrete approaches based on research and conversation. Otherwise state the recommended direction directly.
When useful, include one deliberately higher-upside alternative:
- Identify what adjacent addition or reframing would most increase usefulness, compounding value, or durability without disproportionate carrying cost. Present it as a challenger option alongside the baseline, not as the default. Omit it when the work is already obviously over-scoped or the baseline request is clearly the right move.
For each approach, provide:
- Brief description (2-3 sentences)
- Pros and cons
- Key risks or unknowns
- When it's best suited
Lead with your recommendation and explain why. Prefer simpler solutions when added complexity creates real carrying cost, but do not reject low-cost, high-value polish just because it is not strictly necessary.
Deploy wiring flag: If any approach introduces new backend env vars or config fields, call this out explicitly in the approach description. Deploy values files (e.g. values.yaml, .env.*, Terraform vars) must be updated alongside the config code — not as a follow-up. This is a hard-won lesson; see docs/solutions/deployment-issues/missing-env-vars-in-values-yaml.md.
If one approach is clearly best and alternatives are not meaningful, skip the menu and state the recommendation directly.
If relevant, call out whether the choice is:
- Reuse an existing pattern
- Extend an existing capability
- Build something net new
Phase 3: Capture the Requirements
Write or update a requirements document only when the conversation produced durable decisions worth preserving.
This document should behave like a lightweight PRD without PRD ceremony. Include what planning needs to execute well, and skip sections that add no value for the scope.
The requirements document is for product definition and scope control. Do not include implementation details such as libraries, schemas, endpoints, file layouts, or code structure unless the brainstorm is inherently technical and those details are themselves the subject of the decision.
Required content for non-trivial work:
- Problem frame
- Concrete requirements or intended behavior with stable IDs
- Scope boundaries
- Success criteria
Include when materially useful:
- Key decisions and rationale
- Dependencies or assumptions
- Outstanding questions
- Alternatives considered
- High-level technical direction only when the work is inherently technical and the direction is part of the product/architecture decision
Document structure: Use this template and omit clearly inapplicable optional sections:
---
date: YYYY-MM-DD
topic: <kebab-case-topic>
---
# <Topic Title>
## Problem Frame
[Who is affected, what is changing, and why it matters]
## Requirements
- R1. [Concrete user-facing behavior or requirement]
- R2. [Concrete user-facing behavior or requirement]
## Success Criteria
- [How we will know this solved the right problem]
## Scope Boundaries
- [Deliberate non-goal or exclusion]
## Key Decisions
- [Decision]: [Rationale]
## Dependencies / Assumptions
- [Only include if material]
## Outstanding Questions
### Resolve Before Planning
- [Affects R1][User decision] [Question that must be answered before planning can proceed]
### Deferred to Planning
- [Affects R2][Technical] [Question that should be answered during planning or codebase exploration]
- [Affects R2][Needs research] [Question that likely requires research during planning]
## Next Steps
[If `Resolve Before Planning` is empty: `→ /ce:plan` for structured implementation planning]
[If `Resolve Before Planning` is not empty: `→ Resume /ce:brainstorm` to resolve blocking questions before planning]
For Standard and Deep brainstorms, a requirements document is usually warranted.
For Lightweight brainstorms, keep the document compact. Skip document creation when the user only needs brief alignment and no durable decisions need to be preserved.
For very small requirements docs with only 1-3 simple requirements, plain bullet requirements are acceptable. For Standard and Deep requirements docs, use stable IDs like R1, R2, R3 so planning and later review can refer to them unambiguously.
When the work is simple, combine sections rather than padding them. A short requirements document is better than a bloated one.
Before finalizing, check:
- What would
ce:planstill have to invent if this brainstorm ended now? - Do any requirements depend on something claimed to be out of scope?
- Are any unresolved items actually product decisions rather than planning questions?
- Did implementation details leak in when they shouldn't have?
- Is there a low-cost change that would make this materially more useful?
If planning would need to invent product behavior, scope boundaries, or success criteria, the brainstorm is not complete yet.
Ensure docs/brainstorms/ directory exists before writing.
If a document contains outstanding questions:
- Use
Resolve Before Planningonly for questions that truly block planning - If
Resolve Before Planningis non-empty, keep working those questions during the brainstorm by default - If the user explicitly wants to proceed anyway, convert each remaining item into an explicit decision, assumption, or
Deferred to Planningquestion before proceeding - Do not force resolution of technical questions during brainstorming just to remove uncertainty
- Put technical questions, or questions that require validation or research, under
Deferred to Planningwhen they are better answered there - Use tags like
[Needs research]when the planner should likely investigate the question rather than answer it from repo context alone - Carry deferred questions forward explicitly rather than treating them as a failure to finish the requirements doc
Phase 4: Handoff
4.1 Present Next-Step Options
Present next steps using the platform's blocking question tool when available (see Interaction Rules). Otherwise present numbered options in chat and end the turn.
If Resolve Before Planning contains any items:
- Ask the blocking questions now, one at a time, by default
- If the user explicitly wants to proceed anyway, first convert each remaining item into an explicit decision, assumption, or
Deferred to Planningquestion - If the user chooses to pause instead, present the handoff as paused or blocked rather than complete
- Do not offer
Proceed to planningorProceed directly to workwhileResolve Before Planningremains non-empty
Question when no blocking questions remain: "Brainstorm complete. What would you like to do next?"
Question when blocking questions remain and user wants to pause: "Brainstorm paused. Planning is blocked until the remaining questions are resolved. What would you like to do next?"
Present only the options that apply:
- Proceed to planning (Recommended) - Run
/ce:planfor structured implementation planning - Proceed directly to work - Only offer this when scope is lightweight, success criteria are clear, scope boundaries are clear, and no meaningful technical or research questions remain
- Review and refine - Offer this only when a requirements document exists and can be improved through structured review
- Ask more questions - Continue clarifying scope, preferences, or edge cases
- Share to Proof - Offer this only when a requirements document exists
- Done for now - Return later
If the direct-to-work gate is not satisfied, omit that option entirely.
4.2 Handle the Selected Option
If user selects "Proceed to planning (Recommended)":
Immediately run /ce:plan in the current session. Pass the requirements document path when one exists; otherwise pass a concise summary of the finalized brainstorm decisions. Do not print the closing summary first.
If user selects "Proceed directly to work":
Immediately run /ce:work in the current session using the finalized brainstorm output as context. If a compact requirements document exists, pass its path. Do not print the closing summary first.
If user selects "Share to Proof":
CONTENT=$(cat docs/brainstorms/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-requirements.md)
TITLE="Requirements: <topic title>"
RESPONSE=$(curl -s -X POST https://www.proofeditor.ai/share/markdown \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d "$(jq -n --arg title "$TITLE" --arg markdown "$CONTENT" --arg by "ai:compound" '{title: $title, markdown: $markdown, by: $by}')")
PROOF_URL=$(echo "$RESPONSE" | jq -r '.tokenUrl')
Display the URL prominently: View & collaborate in Proof: <PROOF_URL>
If the curl fails, skip silently. Then return to the Phase 4 options.
If user selects "Ask more questions": Return to Phase 1.3 (Collaborative Dialogue) and continue asking the user questions one at a time to further refine the design. Probe deeper into edge cases, constraints, preferences, or areas not yet explored. Continue until the user is satisfied, then return to Phase 4. Do not show the closing summary yet.
If user selects "Review and refine":
Load the document-review skill and apply it to the requirements document.
When document-review returns "Review complete", return to the normal Phase 4 options and present only the options that still apply. Do not show the closing summary yet.
4.3 Closing Summary
Use the closing summary only when this run of the workflow is ending or handing off, not when returning to the Phase 4 options.
When complete and ready for planning, display:
Brainstorm complete!
Requirements doc: docs/brainstorms/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-requirements.md # if one was created
Key decisions:
- [Decision 1]
- [Decision 2]
Recommended next step: `/ce:plan`
If the user pauses with Resolve Before Planning still populated, display:
Brainstorm paused.
Requirements doc: docs/brainstorms/YYYY-MM-DD-<topic>-requirements.md # if one was created
Planning is blocked by:
- [Blocking question 1]
- [Blocking question 2]
Resume with `/ce:brainstorm` when ready to resolve these before planning.