| name | spec-driven-planning |
| description | Use when planning new features or need structured requirements - creates feature structure, elicits EARS requirements through systematic questioning, proposes architectural approaches with trade-offs. Activates when user mentions "new feature", "requirements", "specs", "design", "architecture", or uses /dev-workflow:spec commands (create, requirements, design). |
| allowed-tools | Read, Write, Glob, Grep, WebSearch, WebFetch, Bash |
Spec-Driven Planning Skill
Purpose
Guide feature planning through three structured phases: Feature Creation → Requirements (EARS) → Technical Design. This systematic approach ensures clear requirements and thoughtful design before implementation begins.
Activation Triggers
Activate this skill when:
- User says "create a new feature"
- User mentions "requirements", "specifications", or "specs"
- User uses
/dev-workflow:speccommand with planning options - User asks to plan or design a feature
- User says "I need to build [feature]"
- User mentions "architecture" or "technical design"
Three-Phase Planning Workflow
Phase 1: Feature Creation
Goal: Establish feature structure and placeholder files
Process:
- Parse feature name from user input
- Check existing features using Bash tool:
ls docx/features/ - Determine next number (NN) for feature directory
- Create directory using Bash tool:
mkdir -p docx/features/[NN-feature-name] - Copy templates from plugin to feature directory:
- Use Read tool:
dev-workflow/templates/requirements.md - Use Write tool:
docx/features/[NN-feature-name]/requirements.md(replace [Feature Name] with actual name) - Use Read tool:
dev-workflow/templates/design.md - Use Write tool:
docx/features/[NN-feature-name]/design.md(replace [Feature Name] with actual name) - Use Read tool:
dev-workflow/templates/tasks.md - Use Write tool:
docx/features/[NN-feature-name]/tasks.md(replace [Feature Name] with actual name)
- Use Read tool:
Output:
Created feature: docx/features/[NN-feature-name]/
- requirements.md (from template)
- design.md (from template)
- tasks.md (from template)
Next step: Define requirements using EARS format
User Confirmation:
"Feature structure created. Ready to define requirements?"
Phase 2: Requirements Definition (EARS Format)
Goal: Capture clear, testable requirements using EARS methodology
Brainstorming Integration (Optional):
- If user has rough idea but unclear requirements, use Skill tool to invoke:
dev-workflow:brainstorming - Helps clarify what to build vs. what's out of scope
- Explores different feature scopes through collaborative questioning
- Determines must-haves vs. nice-to-haves
How to activate:
Use Skill tool: Skill(skill: "dev-workflow:brainstorming")
EARS Format Explained:
EARS (Easy Approach to Requirements Syntax) provides five templates for unambiguous requirements:
Ubiquitous Requirements - Always true
- Template: "The system SHALL [requirement]"
- Example: "The system SHALL validate all user inputs before processing"
Event-Driven Requirements - Triggered by events
- Template: "WHEN [trigger] THEN the system SHALL [response]"
- Example: "WHEN user clicks submit THEN the system SHALL validate form data"
State-Driven Requirements - Active during specific states
- Template: "WHILE [state] the system SHALL [requirement]"
- Example: "WHILE processing payment the system SHALL display loading indicator"
Conditional Requirements - Based on conditions
- Template: "IF [condition] THEN the system SHALL [requirement]"
- Example: "IF user role is admin THEN the system SHALL show management panel"
Optional Requirements - Feature toggles
- Template: "WHERE [feature included] the system SHALL [requirement]"
- Example: "WHERE premium subscription is active the system SHALL enable advanced analytics"
Research Protocol (Before Eliciting Requirements):
Before diving into requirement questions, gather context through research:
Prior Art Research
- Use WebSearch to find similar features/products
- Query: "[feature type] best practices 2025"
- Query: "[feature type] common requirements"
Technical Documentation
- Use WebFetch on relevant technical docs, APIs, or standards
- Fetch competitor/similar product documentation
API Research (if applicable)
- Use Bash with
curlto explore API endpoints - Fetch API documentation and schemas
- Use Bash with
Document Findings
- Summarize key insights in requirements.md under "## Research Summary"
- Note patterns, anti-patterns, and industry standards discovered
🗣 Say: "Let me research similar implementations before we define requirements."
Systematic Questioning Approach:
Ask the user these questions to elicit requirements:
Core Functionality
- "What is the primary purpose of this feature?"
- "What problem does it solve?"
Event-Driven Requirements
- "What user actions trigger this feature?"
- "What system events are involved?"
State-Driven Requirements
- "Are there different states or modes?"
- "What should happen during each state?"
Conditional Requirements
- "Are there different behaviors for different users/roles?"
- "What conditions affect functionality?"
Performance Requirements
- "Are there response time requirements?"
- "What's the expected load/scale?"
Security Requirements
- "What data needs protection?"
- "Who should have access?"
Error Handling
- "What can go wrong?"
- "How should errors be handled?"
Edge Cases
- "What are the boundary conditions?"
- "What happens at extremes?"
Best Practices:
- Use "SHALL" for mandatory requirements
- Be specific and measurable (avoid "quickly", use "within 2 seconds")
- One requirement per statement
- Avoid ambiguous terms ("appropriate", "reasonable", "user-friendly")
- Use active voice
Requirement IDs & Traceability:
- Assign unique IDs to every requirement using a consistent prefix (e.g.,
REQ-001). - Keep numbering sequential across all requirement types (functional + non-functional).
- Record the IDs directly in each requirement line so later tasks can reference them.
- Add a short traceability note indicating how tasks/design will map back to these IDs.
Output Format:
Update docx/features/[NN-feature-name]/requirements.md with:
- Overview section
- Functional requirements (organized by EARS type)
- Non-functional requirements (performance, security, usability)
- Constraints
- Acceptance criteria (checkboxes)
- Out of scope items
User Confirmation:
"Requirements complete. Ready for design phase?"
Phase 3: Technical Design
Goal: Create comprehensive technical design with architectural decisions
Research Protocol (Before Design):
Before proposing architectural approaches, research solutions:
Architecture Research
- Use WebSearch: "[technology] architecture patterns 2025"
- Use WebSearch: "[problem domain] implementation approaches"
Library/Framework Research
- Use WebFetch on documentation for potential libraries
- Compare approaches used by similar projects
API Research (if applicable)
- Use WebFetch on external API documentation
- Use Bash with
curlto test API endpoints - Understand integration requirements and constraints
Document Findings
- Add "## Technical Research" section to design.md
- Include links to sources and key insights
🗣 Say: "Let me research technical approaches before proposing architecture options."
Process:
Brainstorming Integration
- Use Skill tool to invoke:
dev-workflow:brainstormingfor collaborative design exploration - Explore 2-3 different architectural approaches
- Discuss trade-offs for each approach
How to activate:
Use Skill tool: Skill(skill: "dev-workflow:brainstorming")- Use Skill tool to invoke:
UltraThink for Complex Designs: Before proposing technical approaches, activate deep thinking when:
- Architecture involves multiple services or complex data flows
- Trade-offs between approaches aren't obvious
- Design impacts security, performance, or scalability
- Requirements seem contradictory or incomplete
🗣 Say: "This design requires deep thinking. Let me ultrathink the architectural fundamentals before proposing approaches."
During UltraThink, question:
- Are we solving the right problem?
- What are we assuming that might be wrong?
- What could break at scale?
- What's the simplest architecture that works?
- What are the hidden costs of each approach?
- What would we do differently if starting from scratch?
After UltraThink: Present approaches with explicit reasoning about architectural trade-offs and scalability considerations.
Approach Comparison Present options with trade-offs:
Option A: [Approach Name]
- Pros: [Advantages]
- Cons: [Disadvantages]
- Complexity: Low/Medium/High
- Timeline: [Estimate]
Option B: [Approach Name]
- Pros: [Advantages]
- Cons: [Disadvantages]
- Complexity: Low/Medium/High
- Timeline: [Estimate]
Recommendation
- State recommended approach
- Provide clear reasoning
- Explain why it best fits requirements
Design Document Structure Create comprehensive
design.mdcovering:Architecture Overview
- How feature fits into system
- High-level component diagram (ASCII art)
Component Structure
- List components with responsibilities
- Define dependencies between components
- Specify public interfaces
Data Flow
- Step-by-step data movement
- Diagram showing flow
API Contracts
- Input/output schemas
- Error responses
- Example requests/responses
Error Handling
- Error scenarios and handling strategy
- Fallback behaviors
Security Considerations
- Authentication/authorization
- Input validation
- Data protection
Performance Considerations
- Optimization strategies
- Caching approach
- Database indexing needs
Testing Strategy
- Unit test areas
- Integration test scenarios
- E2E test workflows
Approval Gate:
"Design complete. Ready for task breakdown?"
Wait for explicit user approval before proceeding.
Next Steps
After design approval, use /dev-workflow:spec tasks or /dev-workflow:spec execute to activate the spec-driven-implementation skill, which will:
- Break down your design into TDD tasks with Red-Green-Refactor cycles
- Guide systematic execution with quality gates
- Track progress with checkbox updates
- Integrate with code-quality and git-workflow skills
Examples
Example 1: Creating User Authentication Feature
User: "I need to add user authentication"
Assistant:
Activating spec-driven-planning skill for feature planning.
Let me create the feature structure:
Created feature: docx/features/01-user-authentication/
- requirements.md
- design.md
- tasks.md
Phase 1 Complete. Ready to define requirements?
User: "Yes"
Assistant:
Phase 2: Requirements Definition (EARS Format)
Let me ask some questions to capture clear requirements:
1. Core Functionality:
- What authentication methods should be supported? (email/password, OAuth, etc.)
- Should there be session management?
2. Events:
- What happens when user tries to log in?
- What happens when session expires?
[...continues with systematic questioning...]
Example 2: Resuming at Design Phase
User: "/dev-workflow:spec design"
Assistant:
Activating spec-driven-planning skill at Phase 3: Design
Found latest feature: docx/features/01-user-authentication/
Requirements already defined. Let me propose architectural approaches:
**Option A: JWT-Based Authentication**
Pros: Stateless, scalable, works across services
Cons: Token invalidation complexity, larger payload
Complexity: Medium
**Option B: Session-Based Authentication**
Pros: Simple invalidation, smaller cookies, familiar pattern
Cons: Requires session storage, scaling challenges
Complexity: Low
Recommendation: Option A (JWT-Based)
Reasoning: Better for microservices, future-proof, industry standard
Proceed with JWT-based design?
Notes
- Always request explicit approval between phases
- Use EARS format strictly for requirements
- Focus on "what" and "how", not "doing"
- Create clear, complete documentation before implementation
- Explore multiple architectural options before recommending one
- Wait for user approval before activating implementation skill