| name | workthrough |
| description | Automatically document all development work and code modifications in a structured workthrough format. Use this skill after completing any development task, bug fix, feature implementation, or code refactoring to create comprehensive documentation. |
| license | MIT |
This skill automatically generates detailed workthrough documentation for all development work, capturing the context, changes made, and verification results in a clear, structured format.
When to Use This Skill
Use this skill automatically after:
- Implementing new features or functionality
- Fixing bugs or errors
- Refactoring code
- Making configuration changes
- Updating dependencies
- Resolving build/compilation issues
- Any significant code modifications
Documentation Structure
The workthrough documentation follows this structure:
- Title: Clear, descriptive title of the work completed
- Overview: Brief summary of what was accomplished and why
- Changes Made: Detailed breakdown of all modifications
- Code Examples: Key code snippets showing important changes
- Verification Results: Build/test results confirming success
Implementation Guidelines
When generating workthrough documentation:
1. Capture Complete Context
- What problem was being solved?
- What errors or issues existed before?
- What approach was taken?
- Why were specific decisions made?
2. Document All Changes Systematically
- List each file modified with full paths
- Describe what changed in each file
- Include before/after code snippets for significant changes
- Note any dependencies added or removed
- Document configuration updates
3. Show Code Examples
Use clear, well-formatted code blocks:
// file: src/path/to/file.tsx
<div className="example">
{/* Show relevant code changes */}
</div>
4. Include Verification
- Build output showing success
- Test results
- Error messages (if any remain)
- Exit codes
- Screenshots (if relevant)
5. Use Clear Formatting
- Use markdown headers (##, ###)
- Use bullet points and numbered lists
- Use code blocks with syntax highlighting
- Use blockquotes for output/logs
- Keep paragraphs concise
Document Organization
Save workthrough documents with this naming convention:
workthrough/YYYY-MM-DD-brief-description.md
Or organize by feature/project:
workthrough/feature-name/implementation.md
workthrough/bugfix/issue-123.md
Example Workthrough Structure
# [Clear Descriptive Title]
## Overview
Brief 2-3 sentence summary of what was accomplished.
## Context
- Why was this work needed?
- What was the initial problem/requirement?
- Any relevant background information
## Changes Made
### 1. [First Major Change]
- Specific modification 1
- Specific modification 2
- File: `path/to/file.tsx`
### 2. [Second Major Change]
- Specific modification 1
- File: `path/to/another-file.ts`
### 3. [Additional Changes]
- Dependencies added: `package-name@version`
- Configuration updates: `config-file.json`
## Code Examples
### [Feature/Fix Name]
```typescript
// src/path/to/file.tsx
const example = () => {
// Show the key code changes
}
Verification Results
Build Verification
> build command output
✓ Compiled successfully
Exit code: 0
Test Results
> test command output
All tests passed
Next Steps
- Any follow-up tasks needed
- Known limitations or future improvements
## Automation Instructions
After completing ANY development work:
1. **Gather Information**
- Review all files modified during the session
- Collect build/test output
- Identify the main objective that was accomplished
2. **Create Document**
- Generate workthrough document in `workthrough/` directory
- Use timestamp or descriptive filename
- Follow the structure guidelines above
3. **Be Comprehensive**
- Include all relevant details
- Don't assume future readers have context
- Document decisions and reasoning
- Show concrete examples
4. **Verify Completeness**
- Confirm all changes are documented
- Include verification results
- Add any relevant warnings or notes
## Quality Standards
Good workthrough documentation should:
- Be readable by other developers
- Provide enough detail to understand changes
- Include verification that changes work
- Serve as a reference for similar future work
- Capture important decisions and context
Avoid:
- Overly verbose descriptions
- Unnecessary technical jargon
- Missing verification steps
- Vague or unclear explanations
- Incomplete code examples
## Output Location
Unless specified otherwise, save workthrough documents to:
workthrough/YYYY-MM-DD-brief-description.md
Create the `workthrough/` directory if it doesn't exist.
## Integration with Workflow
This skill should be triggered automatically at the end of development sessions. The documentation serves as:
- A development log/journal
- Knowledge base for the project
- Onboarding material for new developers
- Reference for debugging similar issues
- Record of architectural decisions
Remember: Good documentation is a gift to your future self and your team.