Agent skill
Specification-Driven Development
This skill should be used when the user asks about "spec methodology", "specification workflow", "spec-driven development", "how to write specs", "spec best practices", "specification templates", or needs guidance on creating, validating, decomposing, or executing specifications for software development.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/majiayu000/claude-skill-registry/tree/main/skills/development/specification-driven-development
SKILL.md
Specification-Driven Development Methodology
A systematic approach to software development that starts with comprehensive specifications before implementation.
Workflow Overview
The spec workflow consists of four phases:
/spec:create -> /spec:validate -> /spec:decompose -> /spec:execute
Phase 1: Create (/spec:create)
Generate a comprehensive specification document using first-principles thinking:
- Problem Analysis: Strip away solution assumptions, identify root cause
- Validation: Confirm real user need, audit assumptions
- Technical Discovery: Search codebase, identify conflicts/dependencies
- Specification Writing: 17-section template covering all aspects
When to use: Starting any non-trivial feature or bugfix
Phase 2: Validate (/spec:validate)
Analyze the specification for completeness and detect overengineering:
- WHY Analysis: Intent, goals, success criteria
- WHAT Analysis: Scope, requirements, deliverables
- HOW Analysis: Implementation details, error handling, testing
- YAGNI Check: Cut unnecessary features aggressively
When to use: Before decomposing, after major spec revisions
Phase 3: Decompose (/spec:decompose)
Break the validated spec into actionable implementation tasks:
- Task Breakdown: Single-objective tasks with clear acceptance criteria
- Dependency Mapping: Identify blocking vs parallel work
- Content Preservation: Copy ALL details, don't summarize
- Task Management: Create in STM or TodoWrite
When to use: After spec passes validation
Phase 4: Execute (/spec:execute)
Implement using orchestrated specialist agents:
- Implement: Launch domain expert agents
- Test: Write comprehensive tests
- Review: Code review for completeness AND quality
- Fix: Address issues before marking complete
- Commit: Atomic commits per task
When to use: After decomposition creates tasks
Key Principles
First Principles Problem Analysis
Before any solution, validate the problem:
- What is the core problem separate from solutions?
- Why does this problem exist?
- What would success look like with unlimited resources?
- Could we solve this without building anything?
YAGNI (You Aren't Gonna Need It)
Be aggressive about cutting scope:
- Unsure if needed? Cut it
- For "future flexibility"? Cut it
- Only 20% of users need it? Cut it
- Adds complexity? Question it, probably cut it
Content Preservation
When creating tasks from specs:
- COPY implementation details verbatim
- Include complete code examples
- Never write "as specified in spec"
- Each task must be self-contained
Quality Gates
Each phase has validation checkpoints:
- Specs require 8+/10 quality score
- Tasks require code review approval
- Implementation requires all tests passing
Integration with Task Management
STM (Session Task Manager)
If installed, provides persistent task tracking:
stm init # Initialize
stm add "Task" --details "..." # Create task
stm list --pretty # View tasks
stm update [id] --status done # Complete task
TodoWrite (Fallback)
Built-in session task tracking when STM unavailable.
See Also
- references/spec-template.md - Full 17-section specification template
- references/overengineering-patterns.md - Common patterns to avoid
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