git clone https://github.com/dtormoen/tsk-tsk
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/dtormoen/tsk-tsk "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/skills/tsk-add/skills/tsk-add" ~/.claude/skills/dtormoen-tsk-tsk-add && rm -rf "$T"
skills/tsk-add/skills/tsk-add/SKILL.mdQueue Task from Conversation
You are helping the user queue a task based on the conversation you just had. The user has been discussing a design, architecture decision, or code change with you, and now wants to queue it as an asynchronous task.
Available Templates
These are the task templates available for use with
tsk add -t <template>:
!`tsk template list`
To see the full content of a template, run
tsk template show <template>. When a task is created, the {{PROMPT}} placeholder in the template is replaced with whatever you pipe in via heredoc or pass via the -p flag, and any YAML frontmatter is stripped. The result is what gets sent to the agent.
Your Job
-
Summarize the agreed-upon work: Review the conversation above and identify:
- What change or feature was discussed
- Key design decisions that were made
- Any specific files, components, or areas mentioned
- Acceptance criteria or requirements that were established
- Ask clarifying questions about requirements, architecture choices, or task details
- Only proceed once agreement has been reached
-
Create a task name: Come up with a short, branch-friendly name (e.g.,
,add-auth
,refactor-api
)fix-validation -
Pick the best template: Based on the nature of the task, choose the template from the list above that best matches the work to be done (e.g.,
for new features,feat
for bug fixes,fix
for restructuring,refactor
for documentation).doc -
Write the task prompt: Create a clear, self-contained prompt that includes:
- The goal of the change
- Key design decisions from the conversation
- Specific files or areas to focus on (if discussed)
- Acceptance criteria
-
Queue the task: Use
to create the task:tsk add- If you have already written a plan markdown file, prefer using
--prompt-file - If you do not already have a plan in a file, prefer piping in the input
- If you have already written a plan markdown file, prefer using
tsk add -t <template> -n "<task-name>" <<'EOF' <task description> EOF # Alternatively: tsk add -t <template> --prompt-file <path_to_the_plan>
Guidelines
- Include enough context that an agent without access to this conversation can understand and execute the task
- Reference specific files, functions, or architectural patterns discussed in the conversation
- If the user provided additional context via $ARGUMENTS, incorporate that as well
- Keep the prompt concise but complete - the agent can explore the codebase for details
- Either pipe in input using HEREDOC format OR use the
flag. They do not work together.-p
Example Output When There Is Not a Plan File
tsk add -t feat -n "add-rate-limiting" <<'EOF' Add rate limiting to the API endpoints. ### Context The API currently has no rate limiting, which could allow abuse. We discussed using a token bucket algorithm with Redis for distributed rate limiting. ### Requirements - Add rate limiting middleware to all /api/* routes - Use token bucket algorithm: 100 requests per minute per API key - Store rate limit state in Redis (connection config already exists) - Return 429 Too Many Requests with Retry-After header when limit exceeded ### Files to Focus On - src/middleware/ - add new rate limiting middleware - src/routes/api.ts - apply middleware to routes - src/config/redis.ts - reuse existing Redis connection ### Acceptance Criteria - Rate limiting works correctly under load - Proper error responses with Retry-After header - Tests cover rate limit enforcement and reset behavior EOF
After queuing the task, remind the user they can run
tsk server start if the server isn't already running.
How To Use tsk
tsk is installed and on the path. Here are the main commands:
!`tsk help`
Here are the options for adding tasks:
!`tsk add --help`