Agent-almanac write-continue-here

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/i18n/es/skills/write-continue-here" ~/.claude/skills/pjt222-agent-almanac-write-continue-here-543cb6 && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: i18n/es/skills/write-continue-here/SKILL.md
source content

Write Continue Here

Write a structured continuation file so the next session starts with full context.

When to Use

  • Ending a session with work still in progress
  • Handing off a complex task between sessions
  • Preserving intent, failed approaches, and next steps that git cannot capture
  • Before closing Claude Code when mid-task

Inputs

  • Required: An active session with recent work to summarize
  • Optional: Specific instructions about what to emphasize in the handoff

Procedure

Step 1: Assess Session State

Gather facts about recent work:

git log --oneline -5
git status
git diff --stat

Review the conversation context: what was the objective, what was completed, what is partially done, what was tried and failed, what decisions were made.

Expected: Clear understanding of current task state — completed items, in-progress items, and planned next steps.

On failure: If not in a git repository, skip git commands. The continuation file can still capture conversational context and task state.

Step 2: Write CONTINUE_HERE.md

Write the file to the project root using the structure below. Every section must contain actionable content, not placeholders.

# Continue Here

> Last updated: YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SSZ | Branch: current-branch-name

## Objective
One-paragraph description of what we are trying to accomplish and why.

## Completed
- [x] Finished item with key file paths (e.g., `src/feature.R`)
- [x] Decisions made and their rationale

## In Progress
- [ ] Partially complete work — describe current state (branch, file:line)
- [ ] Known issues with partial work

## Next Steps
1. Immediate next action (most important)
2. Subsequent actions in priority order
3. **[USER]** Items needing user input or decision

## Context
- Failed approaches and why they did not work
- Key constraints or trade-offs discovered
- Relevant issue/PR links

Guidelines:

  • Objective: Capture the WHY — git log shows what changed, not why
  • Completed: Mark items clearly done to prevent re-work
  • In Progress: This is the highest-value section — partial state is hardest to reconstruct
  • Next Steps: Number by priority. Prefix user-dependent items with
    **[USER]**
  • Context: Record negative space — what was tried and rejected, and why

Expected: A CONTINUE_HERE.md file at the project root with all 5 sections populated with real content from the current session. The timestamp and branch are accurate.

On failure: If Write fails, check file permissions. The file should be created in the project root (same directory as

.git/
). Verify
.gitignore
contains
CONTINUE_HERE.md
— if not, add it.

Step 3: Verify the File

Read back CONTINUE_HERE.md and confirm:

  • Timestamp is current (within the last few minutes)
  • Branch name matches
    git branch --show-current
  • All 5 sections contain real content (no template placeholders)
  • Next Steps are numbered and actionable
  • In Progress items describe current state specifically enough to resume

Expected: The file reads as a clear, actionable handoff that a fresh session could use to immediately resume work.

On failure: Edit sections that contain placeholder text or are too vague. Each section should pass the test: "Could a fresh session act on this without asking clarifying questions?"

Validation

  • CONTINUE_HERE.md exists at the project root
  • File contains all 5 sections with real content (not placeholders)
  • Timestamp and branch are accurate
  • .gitignore
    includes
    CONTINUE_HERE.md
  • Next Steps are numbered and actionable
  • In Progress items specify enough detail to resume without questions

Common Pitfalls

  • Writing placeholders instead of content: "TODO: fill in later" defeats the purpose. Every section must contain real information from the current session.
  • Duplicating git state: Do not list every file changed — git already tracks that. Focus on intent, partial state, and next steps.
  • Forgetting the Context section: Failed approaches are the most valuable thing to record. Without them, the next session will retry the same dead ends.
  • Overwriting without reading: If CONTINUE_HERE.md already exists from a prior session, read it first — it may contain unfinished work from an earlier handoff.
  • Leaving stale files: CONTINUE_HERE.md is ephemeral. After the next session consumes it, delete it. Stale files cause confusion.

Related Skills

  • read-continue-here
    — the complement: reading and acting on the continuation file at session start
  • bootstrap-agent-identity
    — cold-start identity reconstruction that consumes the continuation file this skill produces
  • manage-memory
    — durable cross-session knowledge (complements this ephemeral handoff)
  • commit-changes
    — save work to git before writing the continuation file
  • write-claude-md
    — project instructions where optional continuity guidance lives