05b6d799f0
Three more learnings from alirezarezvani/claude-skills, applied: 1. SkillCheck validator (scripts/skillcheck.mjs) — validates every SKILL.md against the authoring standard (frontmatter, name/folder match, trigger + produces clauses, required headings) plus tier referential integrity. Errors fail CI; --strict fails on warnings too. New skillcheck.yml workflow and a SkillCheck status badge in the README. Current: 0 errors / 14 advisory warnings across 172 skills. 2. Cursor export platform — build-exports.mjs now generates exports/cursor/<bundle>/<skill>/<skill>.mdc rule files. The PLATFORMS registry now supports per-skill filenames (file as a function). 3. Per-agent installers — scripts/install.sh unifies install for claude/hermes/codex/openclaw/cursor (--link, --target, --dry-run, --list). Curl-able one-liners codex-install.sh, openclaw-install.sh, and cursor-install.sh clone the library and install in a single command. README documents the one-line installs and Cursor exports; CHANGELOG and the authoring standard updated. Claude-Session: https://claude.ai/code/session_016JWn5jRD5tcEFKrubjQ6Px Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
85 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
85 lines
3.8 KiB
Plaintext
---
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description: "Transform feature briefs into structured design briefs that give designers the context they need before opening Figma. Use when asked to write a design brief, create a design handoff, brief a designer on a new feature, or translate a PRD into design requirements. Produces a brief with user goal, emotional context, success criteria, constraints, edge cases, and out-of-scope boundaries."
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globs:
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alwaysApply: false
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---
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# Design Handoff Brief Skill
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Produce a design brief that sets designers up for success — grounding them in user context and constraints before they open Figma, not after they've gone in the wrong direction.
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## Required Inputs
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Ask the user for these if not provided:
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- **Feature brief or PRD** (even rough notes work)
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- **Designer's name or team** (for personalisation)
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- **Technical constraints** (any engineering limitations already known)
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- **Timeline** (when does design need to be done?)
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## What Designers Actually Need (and PMs Often Skip)
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- The user's goal, not the feature name
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- The emotional state of the user at this moment in the journey
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- What success looks like — how will we know the design worked?
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- Constraints: technical, legal, brand, accessibility
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- Edge cases that must be handled
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- What we're explicitly NOT solving for
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## Process
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1. Read the feature brief or PRD provided
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2. Extract user goal (reframe from feature language to user outcome language)
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3. Identify constraints — technical limitations, brand guidelines, accessibility requirements
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4. List edge cases the design must handle
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5. Define success criteria the design should be evaluated against
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6. Write a "not in scope" section to prevent scope creep in design
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7. **Validate** — Confirm every edge case listed is specific enough to design for, and every out-of-scope item is concrete enough to say "no" to
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## Output Structure
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### Design Brief: [Feature Name]
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**User Goal:** (in the user's words, not ours)
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"When I [situation], I want to [motivation] so that I can [outcome]."
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**Context & Emotional State:**
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[Where is the user in their journey? What are they feeling? What just happened?]
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**Design Success Criteria:**
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- [Criterion 1 — measurable where possible]
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- [Criterion 2]
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- [Criterion 3]
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**Constraints:**
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- Technical: [limitations engineering has flagged]
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- Brand: [relevant brand guidelines]
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- Accessibility: [WCAG level required, any specific requirements]
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- Legal/Compliance: [if applicable]
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**Edge Cases to Design For:**
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- [Edge case 1]
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- [Edge case 2]
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- [Edge case 3]
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**Explicitly Out of Scope:**
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- [What we are NOT solving in this design iteration]
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**Reference Material:**
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- User research: [link]
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- Existing patterns: [Figma component library link]
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- Competitor examples: [links if relevant]
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## Quality Checks
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- [ ] User goal is written in user language (not feature/product language)
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- [ ] At least one edge case covers an error or failure state
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- [ ] Success criteria are measurable or observable (not "looks good")
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- [ ] Out-of-scope section names at least one thing that might seem in scope but isn't
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- [ ] Technical constraints are specific enough for an engineer to confirm
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## Anti-Patterns
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- [ ] Do not write the user goal in feature language ("design the checkout flow") — it must be written from the user's perspective with a motivation and outcome
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- [ ] Do not skip the "Explicitly Out of Scope" section — without it, designers will inadvertently solve problems not intended for this iteration
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- [ ] Do not list edge cases that are so generic they apply to any feature (e.g. "handle errors") — each edge case must be specific to this feature's failure modes
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- [ ] Do not hand off the brief without confirming engineering constraints are accurate — a constraint that is wrong is worse than no constraint
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- [ ] Do not omit the emotional context of the user — designs without emotional grounding produce technically correct but experientially flat results
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