Agent skill

atomic-bead-filing

Use when noticing something off (code smell, design smell, workaround) while working and want to capture it without losing flow - grounds observation in codebase and files a proper bead that future agents can execute

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Install this agent skill to your Project

npx add-skill https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry/tree/main/skills/development/atomic-bead-filing-delightful-ai-beads-rs

SKILL.md

Atomic Bead Filing

Overview

File beads that future agents can execute with zero shared context. You receive an observation, ground it in the codebase, and create a bead that stands alone.

When to Use

  • Main agent noticed something off while working
  • Need to capture it without derailing current task
  • Want a proper bead, not a vague note

Core Principle

A bead is good if a stranger-agent can execute it knowing ONLY:

  1. The bead's description
  2. The codebase (via search/read)

They should NOT need: conversation history, the observer's context, or clarification.

Workflow

  1. Receive observation from main agent (you have conversation context)
  2. Explore codebase to ground it - find specific files, line numbers, patterns
  3. Ask questions via AskUserQuestion if genuinely unclear
  4. Determine actionability:
    • Clear path → actionable bead
    • Multiple valid approaches → add human-needed label, describe options
  5. File bead with bd create
  6. Sync with bd sync (just git commit isn't enough - beads live on beads-sync branch)
  7. Return bead ID + full bead details so main agent sees what was filed

Bead Structure

Title: Concise, grounded summary (not vague)

  • Bad: "Fix type issues"
  • Good: "RuleViolation missing priority field - Rust hardcodes HIGH"

Description: The concrete issue

markdown
## What's Wrong
[Specific problem - what IS off, grounded in files]

## Where
[Exact file paths, line numbers]

## Why It Matters
[What could go wrong, why this is tech debt]

## Files to Study
- path/to/file.rs (the problematic code)
- path/to/related.py (the other side of the mismatch)

Fields to set (run bd create --help to see all available):

Flag When to use
--type task Default. Use bug if actively broken, feature for new capability
--priority P0 critical (security/data loss), P1 high (bugs/blockers), P2 medium, P3 low (polish), P4 backlog - default to your judgment based on impact
--labels human-needed Multiple valid approaches exist (see below)
--deps discovered-from:<id> Main agent was working on a specific bead
--acceptance Fill if obvious - what would "done" look like?
--design Fill if obvious - brief notes on approach/constraints

Fold context into description footer:

markdown
---
*Discovered while: [what triggered this observation]*

human-needed Label

Use when there are forks requiring human decision:

  • Multiple valid architectural approaches
  • Trade-offs that depend on priorities you don't know
  • Breaking changes vs. compatibility concerns

When using human-needed, add to description:

markdown
## Decision Needed
[Specific question]

## Options
1. **Option A**: [approach] - [pros/cons]
2. **Option B**: [approach] - [pros/cons]

What NOT to Do

  • Don't file vague beads ("look into this")
  • Don't propose fixes unless obvious (focus on WHAT is off)
  • Don't skip grounding (always find specific files)
  • Don't ask unnecessary questions (use conversation context + codebase)

Example

Input from main agent: "The severity is hardcoded in transform.rs. Noticed while adding analyzer endpoint."

Your process:

  1. Search for severity in transform.rs
  2. Find line 250: parse_severity("HIGH")
  3. Trace back - where should severity come from?
  4. Find RuleViolation struct doesn't have severity field
  5. Find Python RuleViolationDto DOES have priority field
  6. Ground the full issue

Output bead:

bash
bd create "RuleViolation drops priority - Rust hardcodes HIGH severity" \
  --type task \
  --priority 1 \
  --acceptance "Rust RuleViolation receives and uses Python's computed priority" \
  --description "## What's Wrong
Rust transform hardcodes severity to HIGH, ignoring Python's computed priority.

Line 250 in transform.rs:
\`\`\`rust
let priority = parse_severity(\"HIGH\").unwrap_or(RuleSeverity::Medium);
\`\`\`

## Where
- oxide/server/src/eval/transform.rs:250 (hardcoded value)
- oxide/server/src/eval_client.rs:165-173 (RuleViolation missing priority field)
- src/app/features/evaluation/contracts/rules_contracts.py:62-75 (RuleViolationDto HAS priority)

## Why It Matters
Python evaluator computes actual priority per-violation, but Rust discards it. All violations appear HIGH priority regardless of actual severity. Silent data loss.

## Files to Study
- oxide/server/src/eval/transform.rs (the transform)
- oxide/server/src/eval_client.rs (HTTP receive types)
- src/app/features/evaluation/contracts/rules_contracts.py (Python source types)

---
*Discovered while: adding analyzer endpoint*"

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