Gsd-skill-creator gsd-workflow

Use when the user asks "what should I work on", mentions GSD phases, ROADMAP, or .planning/ artifacts. Routes to the correct GSD command for the current project state.

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/Tibsfox/gsd-skill-creator
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/Tibsfox/gsd-skill-creator "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/examples/skills/gsd/gsd-workflow" ~/.claude/skills/tibsfox-gsd-skill-creator-gsd-workflow && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: examples/skills/gsd/gsd-workflow/SKILL.md
source content

GSD Workflow Routing

Route user intent to GSD commands. Explicit /gsd: commands bypass routing -- read

.claude/commands/gsd/[command].md
directly.

5-Stage Classification Pipeline

When the user provides natural language related to project workflow, route through the GSD Orchestrator's classification pipeline:

  1. Exact match -- direct command mapping (fastest)
  2. Lifecycle filtering -- narrow candidates by current project phase
  3. Bayesian classification -- probabilistic intent matching
  4. Semantic fallback -- embedding-based similarity for ambiguous requests
  5. Confidence resolution -- threshold check; ask user if uncertain

When to use the orchestrator: The user says something like "review the requirements," "what's the project status," "let's verify phase 3," or any natural language that maps to a GSD lifecycle action but doesn't use explicit slash commands.

When to bypass it: The user types an explicit GSD slash command. Execute directly.

When confidence is low: Ask the user to clarify rather than guessing. A wrong routing is worse than a clarifying question.

Quick Command Routing

The top-10 most common routes:

User SaysRoute To
"what should I work on"
/gsd:progress
"continue where I left off"
/gsd:progress
"build phase X"
/gsd:execute-phase X
"plan the next phase"
/gsd:plan-phase N
"discuss how phase X should work"
/gsd:discuss-phase N
"something's broken"
/gsd:debug
"quick fix / small task"
/gsd:quick
"verify phase X"
/gsd:verify-work X
"add a phase"
/gsd:add-phase
"start new project"
/gsd:new-project

For full routing tables including skill-creator actions, see

references/command-routing.md
.

Guidance Heuristics

When to Suggest GSD

Always suggest GSD when:

  • User asks to build, create, or implement something substantial
  • User seems unsure where to start
  • Work would benefit from planning before coding
  • Context is fresh (session just started)

Suggest with explanation:

This looks like a good candidate for `/gsd:plan-phase N` -- it'll break this
down into atomic tasks with verification criteria. Want me to run that,
or would you prefer to dive in directly?

When to Suggest skill-creator

Suggest skill-creator when:

  • You notice the same sequence of steps has occurred 3+ times
  • The user corrects the same kind of output repeatedly
  • A workflow is complex enough to benefit from codification
  • The user asks "why do I keep having to tell you this?"

Suggest naturally:

I've noticed we run the same lint -> test -> fix cycle after every code change.
Want me to capture this as a skill so it happens automatically?

When to Allow Override

Respect user override when:

  • They explicitly say "just do it" or "skip the ceremony"
  • The task is genuinely trivial (< 5 minutes)
  • They're exploring/experimenting, not building
  • They have domain expertise and know what they want

Acknowledge gracefully:

Got it -- working on this directly. If it grows in scope, we can always
capture it in a plan retroactively with `/gsd:quick`.

When to Push Back

Gently push back when:

  • User is about to make changes without understanding current state
  • Work would conflict with existing plans
  • The request is ambiguous and needs questioning

Push back helpfully:

Before I make changes, let me check `/gsd:progress` -- there might be
existing plans that touch this area. One moment...

Phase Behavior

Instruction Markers

MarkerMeaningClaude Action
## > Next Up
Next command to runRead the instruction and execute it
/clear first ->
Context window full, needs resetTell user to run
/clear
, then continue
Ready to build
Planning complete, execution readyProceed to
/gsd:plan-phase
or
/gsd:execute-phase
ROADMAP CREATED
Roadmap agent finishedReview output, proceed to next phase
PLAN CREATED
Planning agent finishedProceed to execution

Workflow Patterns

Standard Cycle:

/gsd:plan-phase N -> /clear -> /gsd:execute-phase N -> /gsd:verify-work N

Fresh Session Recovery:

/gsd:progress  (or)  /gsd:resume-work

Mid-Work Context Reset:

/gsd:pause-work -> /clear -> /gsd:resume-work

Debugging Flow:

/gsd:debug "description" -> investigate -> /clear -> /gsd:debug (resume)

For phase transition details and response patterns, see

references/phase-behavior.md
.

YOLO Mode

Detection: Read

.planning/config.json
. If
"mode": "yolo"
, autonomous operation is active.

6-Step Autonomous Protocol:

  1. Read GSD command output carefully -- it contains your next instruction
  2. Execute the suggested command -- don't wait for user confirmation
  3. Handle
    /clear
    requirements
    -- inform user when context reset is needed
  4. Continue the workflow -- GSD is a pipeline, keep it moving
  5. Load relevant skills -- even in YOLO mode, check for applicable skills before phases
  6. Record observations -- YOLO sessions generate high-value pattern data

For example recognition and edge cases, see

references/yolo-mode.md
.

Running GSD Commands

To run a GSD command, read the command file from

.claude/commands/gsd/[command].md
and follow its process. The command file contains:

  • <objective>
    -- What the command achieves
  • <process>
    -- Step-by-step instructions to follow
  • <success_criteria>
    -- How to know it's complete

Critical: Don't just acknowledge GSD output -- act on it.

Skill Loading Before GSD Phases

Before executing any GSD phase, load relevant generated skills:

  1. Check
    .claude/commands/
    for project-level skills
  2. Check
    ~/.claude/commands/
    for user-level skills
  3. Project-level skills take precedence over user-level on conflict
  4. Load only skills relevant to the current phase and task
  5. Respect the token budget: 2-5% of context window maximum

Critical: When forking subagent contexts for GSD phases (

execute-phase
,
verify-work
), include relevant skills in the subagent's context. Clean context means free of stale conversation history -- not free of learned knowledge.

Anti-Patterns

  • Don't stop after GSD output without reading "Next Up" instructions
  • Don't wait for user input when YOLO mode is enabled and next step is clear
  • Don't start coding without checking if a plan exists
  • Don't make changes that span multiple phases in one session
  • Don't skip commits -- GSD's atomic commits enable rollback
  • Don't ignore STATE.md warnings or blockers
  • Don't create plans manually -- use
    /gsd:plan-phase
  • Don't be rigid -- GSD serves the user, not the other way around