Awesome-omni-skill writing-agents
Use when creating new agents, editing existing agents, or defining specialized subagent roles for the Task tool
git clone https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/diegosouzapw/awesome-omni-skill "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/data-ai/writing-agents-aleksandrov" ~/.claude/skills/diegosouzapw-awesome-omni-skill-writing-agents-461962 && rm -rf "$T"
skills/data-ai/writing-agents-aleksandrov/SKILL.mdWriting Agents
Overview
Writing agents IS Test-Driven Development applied to role definitions.
Agents are specialized subagents invoked via the Task tool. They receive full conversation context and execute autonomously with a defined persona, tools, and behavioral guidelines.
Core principle: If you didn't test the agent on representative tasks, you don't know if it performs correctly.
REQUIRED BACKGROUND: Understand test-driven-development and writing-skills before using this skill. Same RED-GREEN-REFACTOR cycle applies.
Agents vs Skills
| Aspect | Agents | Skills |
|---|---|---|
| Invocation | Task tool with | Skill tool with skill name |
| Context | Full conversation history | Loaded on-demand |
| Execution | Autonomous, multi-turn | Single response guidance |
| Persona | Explicit role/identity | Reference documentation |
| Location | | |
| Use for | Complex, autonomous tasks | Reusable patterns/techniques |
Agent File Structure
Agents are PROJECT-LEVEL. They live in the project's
.claude/agents/ directory, not personal directories.
.claude/agents/ agent-name.md # Single file with frontmatter + persona
Frontmatter (YAML):
--- name: agent-name description: Role description. Use for [specific task types]. model: opus # Optional: opus, sonnet, haiku (defaults to parent) ---
IMPORTANT: After creating or modifying an agent, prompt the user to restart their Claude Code session. Agents are loaded at session start and won't be available until restart.
Agent Creation Workflow
Before writing the agent, gather domain knowledge and project context:
Step 1: Research Domain Best Practices
Use WebSearch to find domain-specific guidance. Search for:
- Best practices for [domain] development
- Common [domain] mistakes/anti-patterns
- [Domain] code review checklist
- [Technology] security considerations
Example searches by domain:
# Laravel backend agent "Laravel best practices 2026" "Laravel anti-patterns to avoid" "Eloquent ORM performance mistakes" "PHP security vulnerabilities OWASP" # React frontend agent "React component best practices 2026" "React performance anti-patterns" "React accessibility checklist" # DevOps/infrastructure agent "AWS Lambda best practices" "Infrastructure as Code anti-patterns" "Cloud security common mistakes" # Database agent "PostgreSQL query optimization" "Database schema anti-patterns" "SQL injection prevention"
Incorporate findings into:
- Anti-patterns section (domain-specific mistakes)
- Best practices (positive patterns to follow)
- Security considerations (if applicable)
Step 2: Gather Codebase Context
Explore the project to make the agent project-specific:
- Read CLAUDE.md and README.md for project conventions
- Identify existing patterns using Glob/Grep:
- Directory structure relevant to agent's domain
- Existing services, controllers, models the agent will work with
- Testing patterns and conventions
- Check existing agents in
for:.claude/agents/- Coordination protocols to follow
- Deferral relationships to establish
- Naming conventions
Example exploration:
# Find project structure for a backend agent Glob: "app/**/*.php" Grep: "class.*Service" Read: "CLAUDE.md", "README.md" # Find existing agent patterns Glob: ".claude/agents/*.md"
Step 3: Write the Agent
Combine research + codebase context into the agent definition:
- Persona grounded in project specifics
- Anti-patterns from both research AND project history
- Project structure and commands the agent needs
- Coordination with existing agents
Step 4: Session Restart
After writing the agent file, inform the user:
Agent created: .claude/agents/[agent-name].md **ACTION REQUIRED:** Please restart your Claude Code session for the new agent to be available. Agents are loaded at session start. To use the agent after restart: - It will appear in the Task tool's available agents - Invoke with: Task tool, subagent_type="[agent-name]"
Anatomy of an Effective Agent
1. Clear Persona Definition
The persona is the agent's DNA. A well-defined persona produces consistent behavior across interactions.
You are a [specific role] with expertise in [domains]. You specialize in [specific capabilities] for [context/project].
Good persona:
You are a senior PHP/Laravel backend developer with deep expertise in Laravel, PHP, and server-side architecture. You specialize in building robust, scalable backend systems with clean architecture and secure coding practices for the [Project Name] platform.
Bad persona:
You are a helpful assistant that can help with code.
2. Explicit Scope Boundaries
Define what the agent DOES and DOES NOT handle. Prevents scope creep and enables deferral to specialists.
## CORE COMPETENCIES - [Domain 1]: Specific capabilities - [Domain 2]: Specific capabilities **Not in scope** (defer to [other-agent]): - [Excluded domain 1] - [Excluded domain 2]
3. Anti-Patterns Section
List specific mistakes to avoid. More effective than generic guidelines.
## Anti-Patterns to Avoid - **N+1 query prevention** -- always eager load relationships with `with()` - **Never use `Model::all()`** on large tables -- use pagination - **Use `config()` not `env()`** -- never call `env()` outside config files
4. Coordination Protocols
Define how the agent coordinates with others. Essential for multi-agent workflows.
## Coordination with [Other Agent] **When delegated work:** 1. Acknowledge the task 2. Implement following their requirements 3. Report completion with specific details **Report format:** - Issue/task reference - Changes made (files, methods) - Testing performed - Explicit "ready for next step" statement
5. Project Context
Provide relevant project structure and conventions. Enables autonomous operation.
## PROJECT CONTEXT ### Project Structure
project/ ├── app/Controllers/ # HTTP handlers ├── app/Services/ # Business logic └── app/Models/ # Database models
### Key Commands ```bash composer run dev # Start development php artisan test # Run tests
## Agent Description Best Practices The description field is critical for Task tool routing. Claude uses it to select the right agent. **Format:** `[Role statement]. Use for [specific task types].` **Good descriptions:** ```yaml # Specific role + clear triggers description: Senior PHP/Laravel backend developer. Use for controllers, models, services, middleware, Eloquent ORM, database migrations, API endpoints, authentication, and PHPUnit testing. # Clear scope + deferral description: Frontend CSS/HTML craftsman specializing in bulletproof interfaces. Use for CSS architecture, responsive design, Blade templates. Defers to laravel-backend-developer for PHP. # Domain-specific expertise description: AWS infrastructure engineer. Use for Cognito, RDS, Lambda, VPC, IAM, SES, SNS, Secrets Manager, EventBridge, CloudWatch, and boto3 operations.
Bad descriptions:
# Too vague description: Helps with code # No trigger conditions description: A senior developer # Process summary (causes shortcut behavior) description: Reviews code by checking style, then logic, then tests
Model Selection
Choose the right model for the task complexity:
| Model | Use When | Cost |
|---|---|---|
| haiku | Quick, straightforward tasks | Low |
| sonnet | Balanced complexity (default) | Medium |
| opus | Deep reasoning, architecture decisions | High |
# Example: Code simplification needs deep judgment model: opus # Example: Documentation generation is straightforward model: haiku
Omit
to inherit from parent conversation.model
Common Agent Patterns
Specialist Agent
Focused on a single domain with clear boundaries and deferral rules.
You are a [specialist role] focused on [specific domain]. **Your scope:** - [Capability 1] - [Capability 2] **Defer to [other-agent] for:** - [Out-of-scope area 1] - [Out-of-scope area 2]
Orchestrator Agent
Coordinates other agents, manages workflow, doesn't do implementation.
You orchestrate [workflow type]. You delegate to specialist agents and track progress. **You manage:** - Task breakdown and assignment - Progress tracking - Integration of results **You do NOT:** - Write code directly - Make implementation decisions - Deploy without approval
Reviewer Agent
Evaluates work against criteria, provides structured feedback.
You review [artifact type] against [criteria]. **Review process:** 1. [Step 1] 2. [Step 2] 3. [Step 3] **Output format:** - Status: [PASS/FAIL/NEEDS_CHANGES] - Issues: [List] - Recommendations: [List]
Testing Agents
RED: Baseline Without Agent
Run representative tasks with a generic prompt. Document:
- What mistakes does it make?
- What context does it lack?
- Where does it go wrong?
GREEN: Write Minimal Agent
Address specific baseline failures:
- Add persona for role consistency
- Add anti-patterns for common mistakes
- Add project context for autonomy
REFACTOR: Close Loopholes
Test edge cases:
- Does it stay in scope?
- Does it defer correctly?
- Does it follow coordination protocols?
Agent Creation Checklist
Research Phase:
- WebSearch for "[domain] best practices [current year]"
- WebSearch for "[domain] anti-patterns" or "[domain] common mistakes"
- WebSearch for "[technology] security considerations" (if applicable)
- Document key findings for anti-patterns section
Context Phase:
- Read CLAUDE.md and README.md for project conventions
- Explore codebase structure relevant to agent's domain
- Check existing agents in
for patterns.claude/agents/ - Identify coordination/deferral relationships needed
RED Phase:
- Identify the specialized task type
- Test baseline behavior without agent
- Document specific failures and gaps
GREEN Phase:
- Clear persona with specific expertise AND project context
- Explicit scope boundaries (does/doesn't)
- Anti-patterns from BOTH research AND project experience
- Project structure and commands included
- Coordination protocols if multi-agent
- Model selection appropriate for complexity
REFACTOR Phase:
- Test on representative tasks
- Verify scope boundaries respected
- Verify deferral works correctly
- Verify coordination protocols followed
Quality Checks:
- Description under 500 chars, includes triggers
- Persona is specific, not generic
- Anti-patterns are actionable, not vague
- No process summary in description
Deployment:
- Agent file written to
.claude/agents/[name].md - User prompted to restart session
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
Generic Persona
# BAD: Could be anyone You are a helpful assistant. # GOOD: Specific expertise and context You are a senior PHP/Laravel backend developer with deep expertise in Laravel 11, PHP 8.2, and PostgreSQL for the [Project Name] platform.
Missing Scope Boundaries
# BAD: No limits You can help with anything. # GOOD: Clear boundaries with deferral **Not in scope** (defer to bulletproof-frontend-developer): - CSS, Tailwind, styling - JavaScript, Alpine.js - Blade template layout
Vague Anti-Patterns
# BAD: Too general - Write good code - Follow best practices # GOOD: Specific and actionable - **N+1 prevention** -- always use `with()` for relationships - **Never use `env()`** outside config files -- use `config()` helper
Process in Description
# BAD: Claude may follow description instead of reading agent description: Reviews code by first checking style, then logic, then tests, finally creating report # GOOD: Just triggers, no process description: Code quality reviewer. Use after completing features to check against standards.
The Bottom Line
Agents are autonomous specialists. They need:
- Clear identity - Who they are, what they know
- Explicit scope - What they do and don't do
- Actionable guidelines - Specific anti-patterns, not vague advice
- Coordination protocols - How they work with others
Test your agents on real tasks. A well-defined persona produces consistent, reliable behavior. A vague persona produces unpredictable results.