| name | spec-implementation |
| description | Implements approved specification proposals by working through tasks sequentially with testing and validation. Use when implementing changes, applying proposals, executing spec tasks, or building from approved plans. Triggers include "implement", "apply change", "execute spec", "work through tasks", "build feature", "start implementation". |
Specification Implementation
Systematically implements approved spec proposals by executing tasks sequentially with proper testing and validation.
Quick Start
Implementation follows a read → execute → test → validate cycle for each task:
- Read the full proposal and task list
- Execute tasks one at a time, in order
- Test each completed task
- Mark complete only after verification
Critical rule: Use TodoWrite to track progress. Never skip tasks or mark incomplete work as done.
Workflow
Copy this checklist and track progress:
Implementation Progress:
- [ ] Step 1: Load and understand the proposal
- [ ] Step 2: Set up TodoWrite task tracking
- [ ] Step 3: Execute tasks sequentially
- [ ] Step 4: Test and validate each task
- [ ] Step 5: Update living specifications (if applicable)
- [ ] Step 6: Mark proposal as implementation-complete
Step 1: Load and understand the proposal
Before starting, read all context:
# Read the proposal
cat spec/changes/{change-id}/proposal.md
# Read all tasks
cat spec/changes/{change-id}/tasks.md
# Read spec deltas to understand requirements
find spec/changes/{change-id}/specs -name "*.md" -exec cat {} \;
Understand:
- Why this change is needed (from proposal.md)
- What the expected outcomes are
- Which specs will be affected
- What the acceptance criteria are (from scenarios)
Step 2: Set up TodoWrite task tracking
Load tasks from tasks.md into TodoWrite before starting work:
**Pattern**:
Read tasks.md → Extract numbered list → Create TodoWrite entries
**Example**:
If tasks.md contains:
1. Create database migration
2. Implement API endpoint
3. Add tests
4. Update documentation
Then create TodoWrite with:
- content: "Create database migration", status: "in_progress"
- content: "Implement API endpoint", status: "pending"
- content: "Add tests", status: "pending"
- content: "Update documentation", status: "pending"
Why this matters: TodoWrite gives the user visibility into progress and ensures nothing gets skipped.
Step 3: Execute tasks sequentially
Work through tasks one at a time, in order:
For each task:
1. Mark as "in_progress" in TodoWrite
2. Execute the work
3. Test the work
4. Only mark "completed" after verification
NEVER skip ahead or batch multiple tasks before testing.
Task execution pattern:
## Task: {Task Description}
**What**: [Brief explanation of what this task does]
**Implementation**:
[Code changes, file edits, commands run]
**Verification**:
[How to verify this task is complete]
- [ ] Code compiles/runs
- [ ] Tests pass
- [ ] Meets requirement scenarios
**Status**: ✓ Complete / ✗ Blocked / ⚠ Partial
Step 4: Test and validate each task
After each task, verify it works:
For code tasks:
# Run relevant tests
npm test # or pytest, cargo test, etc.
# Run linter
npm run lint
# Check types (if applicable)
npm run type-check
For database tasks:
# Verify migration runs
npm run db:migrate
# Check schema matches expected
npm run db:schema
For API tasks:
# Test endpoint manually
curl -X POST http://localhost:3000/api/endpoint \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"test": "data"}'
# Or run integration tests
npm run test:integration
Only mark task complete after all verifications pass.
Step 5: Update living specifications (if applicable)
During implementation, if you discover the spec deltas need updates:
- Document the discovery in proposal.md or a notes file
- Do NOT modify spec deltas during implementation
- After implementation completes, consider whether spec needs adjustment
Note: Spec deltas are merged during archiving (Step 6), not during implementation.
Step 6: Mark proposal as implementation-complete
After all tasks are complete:
# Create a completion marker
echo "Implementation completed: $(date)" > spec/changes/{change-id}/IMPLEMENTED
Tell the user:
## Implementation Complete
**Change**: {change-id}
**Tasks completed**: {count}
**Tests**: All passing
**Next step**: Archive this change to merge spec deltas into living documentation.
Say "archive {change-id}" or "archive this change" when ready.
Best Practices
Pattern 1: Blocked Tasks
If a task cannot be completed:
**Mark as blocked**:
- Keep status as "in_progress" (NOT "completed")
- Document the blocker clearly
- Create a new task for resolving the blocker
- Inform the user immediately
**Example**:
Task: "Implement payment processing"
Blocker: "Missing API credentials for payment gateway"
Action: Create new task "Obtain payment gateway credentials"
Pattern 2: Task Dependencies
If tasks have dependencies, verify prerequisites before starting:
# Example: Database migration must run before API code
# Check migration status
npm run db:status
# Only proceed with API task if migration succeeded
Pattern 3: Incremental Testing
Test incrementally, not at the end:
Good:
Task 1: Create model → Test model → Mark complete
Task 2: Create API → Test API → Mark complete
Task 3: Add validation → Test validation → Mark complete
Bad:
Task 1, 2, 3 → Implement all → Test everything → Debug failures
Pattern 4: Living Documentation
Keep README, API docs, and comments up to date as you go:
When adding a new API endpoint, also:
- Update API documentation
- Add example request/response
- Update OpenAPI/Swagger spec
- Add inline code comments
Advanced Topics
Parallel work: If tasks are truly independent (e.g., separate modules), you can work on them in parallel, but each must be tested independently.
Integration points: When task dependencies exist, use integration tests to verify the connection works.
Rollback strategy: For risky changes, create rollback tasks before deploying.
Common Patterns
Pattern 1: Database + API + UI
Typical order:
- Database schema/migration
- Data access layer (models)
- Business logic layer (services)
- API endpoints (controllers)
- UI integration
- End-to-end tests
Pattern 2: Feature Flags
For gradual rollouts:
- Implement feature behind flag
- Test with flag enabled
- Deploy with flag disabled
- Enable flag incrementally
- Remove flag after full rollout
Pattern 3: Breaking Changes
For API breaking changes:
- Implement new version (v2)
- Keep old version (v1) working
- Add deprecation warnings to v1
- Migrate users to v2
- Remove v1 (separate task/proposal)
Anti-Patterns to Avoid
Don't:
- Skip testing individual tasks
- Mark tasks complete before verification
- Ignore failing tests ("I'll fix it later")
- Batch multiple tasks before testing
- Modify living specs during implementation
- Work out of order (dependencies break)
Do:
- Test each task immediately
- Fix failing tests before proceeding
- Update TodoWrite in real-time
- Document blockers clearly
- Communicate progress to user
- Keep commits atomic and descriptive
Troubleshooting
Issue: Tests failing after task completion
Solution:
1. Do NOT mark task complete
2. Debug the failure
3. Fix the code
4. Re-run tests
5. Only mark complete after pass
Issue: Task is too large
Solution:
1. Break into subtasks
2. Update TodoWrite with subtasks
3. Complete subtasks sequentially
4. Mark parent task complete after all subtasks done
Issue: Dependency not met
Solution:
1. Pause current task
2. Complete dependency first
3. Test dependency
4. Resume original task
Reference Materials
- TASK_PATTERNS.md - Common task execution patterns
- TESTING_STRATEGIES.md - Testing approaches by task type
Token budget: This SKILL.md is approximately 430 lines, under the 500-line recommended limit.