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uroma b60638f0a3 Add community skills, agents, system prompts from 22+ sources
Community Skills (32):
- jat: jat-start, jat-verify, jat-complete
- pi-mono: codex-cli, codex-5.3-prompting, interactive-shell
- picoclaw: github, weather, tmux, summarize, skill-creator
- dyad: 18 skills (swarm-to-plan, multi-pr-review, fix-issue, lint, etc.)
- dexter: dcf valuation skill

Agents (23):
- pi-mono subagents: scout, planner, reviewer, worker
- toad: 19 agent configs (Claude, Codex, Gemini, Copilot, OpenCode, etc.)

System Prompts (91):
- Anthropic: 15 Claude prompts (opus-4.6, code, cowork, etc.)
- OpenAI: 49 GPT prompts (gpt-5 series, o3, o4-mini, tools)
- Google: 13 Gemini prompts (2.5-pro, 3-pro, workspace, cli)
- xAI: 5 Grok prompts
- Other: 9 misc prompts (Notion, Raycast, Warp, Kagi, etc.)

Hooks (9):
- JAT hooks for session management, signal tracking, activity logging

Prompts (6):
- pi-mono templates for PR review, issue analysis, changelog audit

Sources analyzed: jat, ralph-desktop, toad, pi-mono, cmux, pi-interactive-shell,
craft-agents-oss, dexter, picoclaw, dyad, system_prompts_leaks, Prometheus,
zed, clawdbot, OS-Copilot, and more
2026-02-13 10:58:17 +00:00

233 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown

---
name: jat-start
description: Begin working on a JAT task. Registers agent identity, selects a task, searches memory, detects conflicts, reserves files, emits IDE signals, and starts work. Use this at the beginning of every JAT session.
metadata:
author: jat
version: "1.0"
---
# /skill:jat-start - Begin Working
**One agent = one session = one task.** Each session handles exactly one task from start to completion.
## Usage
```
/skill:jat-start # Show available tasks
/skill:jat-start task-id # Start specific task
/skill:jat-start AgentName # Resume as AgentName
/skill:jat-start AgentName task-id # Resume as AgentName on task
```
Add `quick` to skip conflict checks.
## What This Does
1. **Establish identity** - Register or resume agent in Agent Registry
2. **Select task** - From parameter or show recommendations
3. **Search memory** - Surface context from past sessions
4. **Review prior tasks** - Check for duplicates and related work
5. **Start work** - Reserve files, update task status
6. **Emit signals** - IDE tracks state through jat-signal
## Step-by-Step Instructions
### STEP 1: Parse Arguments
Check what was passed: `$ARGUMENTS` may contain agent-name, task-id, both, or nothing.
```bash
# Test if a param is a valid task ID
jt show "$PARAM" --json >/dev/null 2>&1 && echo "task-id" || echo "agent-name"
```
### STEP 2: Get/Create Agent Identity
#### 2A: Check for IDE Pre-Registration
If spawned by the IDE, your identity file already exists:
```bash
TMUX_SESSION=$(tmux display-message -p '#S' 2>/dev/null)
PRE_REG_FILE=".claude/sessions/.tmux-agent-${TMUX_SESSION}"
test -f "$PRE_REG_FILE" && cat "$PRE_REG_FILE"
```
If found, use that name and skip to Step 3.
#### 2B: Register Manually (CLI only)
If no pre-registration file exists, pick a name and register:
```bash
# Generate or use provided name
am-register --name "$AGENT_NAME" --program pi --model "$MODEL_ID"
tmux rename-session "jat-${AGENT_NAME}" 2>/dev/null
```
#### 2C: Write Session Identity
For manual sessions, write the identity file so the IDE can track you:
```bash
mkdir -p .claude/sessions
echo "$AGENT_NAME" > ".claude/sessions/agent-${SESSION_ID}.txt"
```
### STEP 3: Select Task
If a task-id was provided, use it. Otherwise, show available work:
```bash
jt ready --json | jq -r '.[] | " [P\(.priority)] \(.id) - \(.title)"'
```
If no task-id provided, display recommendations and stop here.
### STEP 4: Search Memory
Search project memory for relevant context from past sessions:
```bash
jat-memory search "key terms from task title" --limit 5
```
Returns JSON with matching chunks (taskId, section, snippet, score). Use results to:
- Incorporate lessons and gotchas into your approach
- Avoid repeating documented mistakes
- Build on established patterns
If no memory index exists, skip silently.
### STEP 5: Review Prior Tasks
Search for related or duplicate work from the last 7 days:
```bash
DATE_7D=$(date -d '7 days ago' +%Y-%m-%d 2>/dev/null || date -v-7d +%Y-%m-%d)
jt search "$SEARCH_TERM" --updated-after "$DATE_7D" --limit 20 --json
```
Look for:
- **Duplicates** (closed tasks with nearly identical titles) - ask user before proceeding
- **Related work** (same files/features) - note for context
- **In-progress** by other agents - coordinate to avoid conflicts
### STEP 6: Conflict Detection
```bash
am-reservations --json # Check file locks
git diff-index --quiet HEAD -- # Check uncommitted changes
```
### STEP 7: Start the Task
```bash
# Update task status
jt update "$TASK_ID" --status in_progress --assignee "$AGENT_NAME"
# Reserve files you'll edit
am-reserve "relevant/files/**" --agent "$AGENT_NAME" --ttl 3600 --reason "$TASK_ID"
```
### STEP 8: Emit Signals
**Both signals are required before starting actual work.**
#### 8A: Starting Signal
```bash
jat-signal starting '{
"agentName": "AGENT_NAME",
"sessionId": "SESSION_ID",
"taskId": "TASK_ID",
"taskTitle": "TASK_TITLE",
"project": "PROJECT",
"model": "MODEL_ID",
"tools": ["bash", "read", "write", "edit"],
"gitBranch": "BRANCH",
"gitStatus": "clean",
"uncommittedFiles": []
}'
```
#### 8B: Working Signal
After reading the task and planning your approach:
```bash
jat-signal working '{
"taskId": "TASK_ID",
"taskTitle": "TASK_TITLE",
"approach": "Brief description of implementation plan",
"expectedFiles": ["src/**/*.ts"],
"baselineCommit": "COMMIT_HASH"
}'
```
#### 8C: Output Banner
```
╔════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╗
║ STARTING WORK: {TASK_ID} ║
╚════════════════════════════════════════════════════════════╝
Agent: {AGENT_NAME}
Task: {TASK_TITLE}
Priority: P{X}
Approach:
{YOUR_APPROACH_DESCRIPTION}
```
## Asking Questions During Work
**Always emit `needs_input` signal BEFORE asking questions:**
```bash
jat-signal needs_input '{
"taskId": "TASK_ID",
"question": "Brief description of what you need",
"questionType": "clarification"
}'
```
Question types: `clarification`, `decision`, `approval`, `blocker`, `duplicate_check`
After getting a response, emit `working` signal to resume.
## When You Finish Working
**Emit `review` signal BEFORE presenting results:**
```bash
jat-signal review '{
"taskId": "TASK_ID",
"taskTitle": "TASK_TITLE",
"summary": ["What you accomplished", "Key changes"],
"filesModified": [
{"path": "src/file.ts", "changeType": "modified", "linesAdded": 50, "linesRemoved": 10}
]
}'
```
Then output:
```
READY FOR REVIEW: {TASK_ID}
Summary:
- [accomplishment 1]
- [accomplishment 2]
Run /skill:jat-complete when ready to close this task.
```
## Signal Reference
| Signal | When | Required Fields |
|--------|------|-----------------|
| `starting` | After registration | agentName, sessionId, project, model, gitBranch, gitStatus, tools |
| `working` | Before coding | taskId, taskTitle, approach |
| `needs_input` | Before asking questions | taskId, question, questionType |
| `review` | When work complete | taskId, taskTitle, summary |