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mohitagw15856 036511ab3e Windsurf + Aider targets, MCP server, and demo placement (#33)
Broadens both reach (more tools) and content types (an MCP server), continuing
the multi-platform story.

Windsurf + Aider:
- build-exports.mjs gains two platforms: exports/windsurf/*.md (workspace rules,
  trigger: model_decision) and exports/aider/*.md (conventions for `aider --read`).
  Now 5 platforms (ChatGPT, Gemini, Cursor, Windsurf, Aider).
- install.sh + bin/cli.mjs install both (windsurf -> .windsurf/rules, aider ->
  .aider/skills with a --read hint); generated README index is excluded from copies.
- One-line windsurf-install.sh / aider-install.sh wrappers for parity.

MCP server (new content type):
- mcp/server.mjs — zero-dependency stdio MCP server exposing list_skills,
  search_skills, get_skill. Published as a second bin (pm-claude-skills-mcp).
  Logs to stderr; reads bundled skills/ at startup. mcp/README.md documents
  client config.

Also: README hero "See it in action" demo placement (ready to swap in a GIF;
recording guide in web/docs-assets/README.md), Works-With table + exports +
install docs updated, CHANGELOG Unreleased. package.json files/bin updated.


Claude-Session: https://claude.ai/code/session_016JWn5jRD5tcEFKrubjQ6Px

Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-06-17 23:15:38 +01:00

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3.1 KiB
Markdown

---
trigger: model_decision
description: "Draft a structured legal brief, case summary, or legal argument outline. Use when asked to write a legal brief, case note, legal memo, argument outline, or position paper. Produces a structured document using IRAC format (Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion)."
---
# Legal Brief Skill
This skill drafts structured legal briefs and memos using IRAC format — the standard structure for legal writing.
## Required Inputs
- **Brief type** (legal memo / case summary / argument outline / position paper / letter before action)
- **Legal issue or question**
- **Jurisdiction** (England & Wales / US / EU / Other)
- **Relevant facts**
- **Relevant law or cases** (if known — otherwise flagged as [RESEARCH NEEDED])
- **Audience** (internal memo / court submission / client letter)
## Output Structure
### Header
- **To:** [Recipient]
- **From:** [Author]
- **Date:** [Date]
- **Re:** [Matter reference]
- **Confidential:** Subject to legal professional privilege
### Issue(s)
One sentence per legal question:
- Issue 1: Whether X constitutes Y under [law]
### Brief Answer
One sentence per issue — conclusion upfront before analysis.
### Facts
Concise relevant facts only. Flag disputed facts.
### Law (Rule)
- Relevant statute, regulation, or case law
- How the rule has been interpreted in key cases
- Flag [RESEARCH NEEDED] where law is not provided
### Application
- Arguments in favour
- Counter-arguments and responses
- Areas of uncertainty flagged explicitly
### Conclusion
- Clear answer to each issue
- Overall recommendation
- Suggested next steps
### Caveats
What this memo does not cover. What additional research would change the analysis.
---
WARNING: This draft requires review by a qualified legal professional. It does not constitute legal advice.
## Quality Checks
- [ ] Issue is stated as a specific legal question (not a general topic)
- [ ] Brief answer appears before the analysis (conclusion upfront)
- [ ] Disputed facts are explicitly flagged
- [ ] Areas of legal uncertainty are noted (not hidden in confident language)
- [ ] Caveats section lists what would change the analysis
- [ ] Disclaimer is included
## Anti-Patterns
- [ ] Do not present uncertain legal positions with confident language — areas of legal ambiguity must be flagged explicitly, not smoothed over
- [ ] Do not omit the disclaimer — every legal brief output must include the professional review caveat before the user treats it as advice
- [ ] Do not structure the brief chronologically — IRAC format (Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion) must be used regardless of how the user framed the request
- [ ] Do not cite cases or statutes from memory without flagging them as [REQUIRES VERIFICATION] — hallucinated citations are worse than no citations
- [ ] Do not conflate jurisdiction — legal positions in England & Wales, US, and EU can differ materially; always confirm jurisdiction before stating the rule
## Example Trigger Phrases
- "Draft a legal memo on [issue]"
- "Write a legal brief arguing [position]"
- "Summarise the legal position on [topic]"
- "Write a letter before action for [situation]"