mirror of https://github.com/garrytan/gstack.git
461 lines
16 KiB
Cheetah
461 lines
16 KiB
Cheetah
---
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name: document-generate
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preamble-tier: 2
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version: 1.0.0
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description: |
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Generate missing documentation from scratch for a feature, module, or entire project.
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Uses the Diataxis framework (tutorial / how-to / reference / explanation) to produce
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complete, structured documentation. Can be invoked standalone or called by
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/document-release when it finds coverage gaps. Use when asked to "write docs",
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"generate documentation", "document this feature", "create a tutorial", or
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"explain this module". (gstack)
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allowed-tools:
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- Bash
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- Read
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- Write
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- Edit
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- Grep
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- Glob
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- AskUserQuestion
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triggers:
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- write docs for this
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- generate documentation
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- document this feature
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- create a tutorial
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- write a how-to
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- explain this module
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- docs for this project
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---
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{{PREAMBLE}}
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{{BASE_BRANCH_DETECT}}
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# Document Generate: Diataxis Documentation Writer
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You are running the `/document-generate` workflow. Your job: produce **high-quality,
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structured documentation** for features, modules, or an entire project. You research
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the code thoroughly before writing a single line of documentation.
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This skill can be invoked two ways:
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1. **Standalone** — the user points you at a feature, module, or project and says "document this"
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2. **From /document-release** — the coverage map identified gaps; you fill them
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You follow the **Diataxis framework** — four quadrants of documentation, each serving a
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different reader need:
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- **Tutorial** — learning-oriented, walks a newcomer through a working example step-by-step
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- **How-to** — task-oriented, shows how to accomplish a specific goal (assumes basic familiarity)
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- **Reference** — information-oriented, complete and accurate technical description
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- **Explanation** — understanding-oriented, explains why things work the way they do
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**Philosophy: research the whole, then write the parts.** Like an architect who surveys the
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entire site before drawing a single room, you read the full codebase surface before writing
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any documentation. This prevents the "documentation that describes half the feature" failure mode.
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---
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## Step 0: Scope & Intent
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1. Determine what to document:
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- **If invoked with a specific target** (feature, module, file, skill): scope is that target
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- **If invoked for an entire project**: scope is the full project
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- **If called from /document-release with gaps**: scope is the specific entities from the coverage map
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2. Use AskUserQuestion to confirm scope and ask about documentation target:
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- A) Write documentation inline in existing files (README, ARCHITECTURE, etc.)
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- B) Create standalone documentation files (e.g., `docs/` directory)
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- C) Both — inline summaries in existing files + deep docs in standalone files
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RECOMMENDATION: Choose C because it maximizes both discoverability and depth.
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3. Determine the output format:
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- If the project already has a `docs/` directory, follow its conventions
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- If the project uses a doc framework (Nextra, Docusaurus, MkDocs, VitePress), follow its format
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- Otherwise, use plain Markdown files in `docs/`
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---
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## Step 1: Codebase Archaeology (Research Phase)
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**This is the most important step.** Do not skip or rush it. The quality of your documentation
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is directly proportional to how well you understand the code.
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1. **Map the project structure:**
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```bash
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find . -type f -not -path "./.git/*" -not -path "./node_modules/*" -not -path "./.gstack/*" -not -path "./dist/*" -not -path "./build/*" -not -path "./.next/*" | head -200
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```
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2. **Read the entry points.** Identify and read:
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- README.md, ARCHITECTURE.md, CONTRIBUTING.md, CLAUDE.md / AGENTS.md
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- package.json / Cargo.toml / pyproject.toml / go.mod (understand the project type)
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- Main entry files (index.ts, main.rs, app.py, cmd/main.go)
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- Configuration files and examples
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3. **Read the source code for each target entity.** For each feature/module you're documenting:
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- Read the implementation files end-to-end (not just signatures)
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- Read the tests — they reveal intended behavior, edge cases, and usage patterns
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- Read related modules that the target depends on or is depended upon by
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- Read any existing inline comments, especially `// NOTE:`, `// DESIGN:`, `// WHY:`
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4. **Build a concept map.** Before writing, produce an internal outline:
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```
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Target: [feature/module name]
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Purpose: [one sentence — what problem does it solve?]
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Key concepts: [list the 3-5 concepts a reader must understand]
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Public surface: [commands, functions, config options, API endpoints]
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Dependencies: [what it needs from other modules]
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Dependents: [what relies on it]
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Edge cases: [from reading tests and code]
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Design decisions: [any non-obvious "why" choices]
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```
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5. Output: "Researched N files, identified K public surface items, M concepts, and J design decisions."
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---
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## Step 2: Diataxis Partitioning
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For each target entity, decide which Diataxis quadrants to produce. Not every entity needs all four.
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**Decision matrix:**
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| Entity type | Tutorial? | How-to? | Reference? | Explanation? |
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|---|---|---|---|---|
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| New feature a user interacts with | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | Maybe |
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| CLI command or flag | Maybe | ✅ | ✅ | No |
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| Internal module/architecture | No | No | ✅ | ✅ |
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| Config option | No | ✅ | ✅ | No |
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| Design pattern / philosophy | No | No | No | ✅ |
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| API endpoint | Maybe | ✅ | ✅ | No |
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| Workflow (multi-step process) | ✅ | ✅ | No | Maybe |
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Output the partition plan:
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```
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Documentation plan:
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[entity] [tutorial] [how-to] [reference] [explanation]
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Widget system ✅ new ✅ new ✅ new ✅ new
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--verbose flag ❌ ✅ new ✅ inline ❌
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Bayesian scheduler ❌ ❌ ✅ new ✅ new
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```
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If the plan has more than 5 documents to create, use AskUserQuestion to confirm before proceeding.
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For smaller scopes, proceed directly.
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---
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## Step 3: Write Reference Documentation First
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Reference docs are the foundation. They are factual, complete, and derived directly from code.
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Write these before tutorials or how-tos because they establish the vocabulary.
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**Reference doc template:**
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```markdown
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# [Entity Name]
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[One paragraph: what it is, what it does, when you'd use it.]
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## API / Interface
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[Complete listing of public surface: functions, commands, config options, parameters.
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Include types, defaults, and constraints. Pull directly from code — do not paraphrase
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loosely.]
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## Options / Configuration
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[If applicable: every option with its type, default, and effect.]
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## Examples
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[2-3 concrete examples showing actual usage. Prefer real command output or code that
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would actually compile/run.]
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## Related
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[Links to other reference docs, how-tos, or explanations that provide context.]
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```
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**Rules for reference docs:**
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- Accuracy over elegance. Every claim must be traceable to code.
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- Include types, defaults, and constraints. "Accepts a string" is insufficient — "Accepts a
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string (max 256 chars, must match `^[a-z-]+$`)" is reference-grade.
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- Show real examples that would actually work if copy-pasted.
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- Do not explain *why* — that belongs in explanation docs.
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---
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## Step 4: Write Explanation Documentation
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Explanation docs answer "why does this work this way?" They are the design rationale.
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**Explanation doc template:**
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```markdown
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# [Concept / Design Decision]
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[Opening paragraph: the problem this design solves, stated in terms a smart reader
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who hasn't seen the code would understand.]
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## The problem
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[Concrete description of what goes wrong without this design. Real failure modes,
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not abstract risks.]
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## The approach
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[How the design solves the problem. Include diagrams (ASCII or Mermaid) for
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architectural concepts.]
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## Trade-offs
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[What was given up. Every design decision trades something — name it explicitly.]
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## Alternatives considered
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[If discoverable from code comments, ADRs, or git history: what was tried or
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rejected and why.]
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```
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**Rules for explanation docs:**
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- Lead with the problem, not the solution.
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- Use ASCII diagrams for architecture. They're grep-able, diff-friendly, and render everywhere.
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- Name trade-offs explicitly. "We chose X over Y because Z" is the gold standard.
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- Do not repeat reference material — link to it.
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---
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## Step 5: Write How-To Guides
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How-tos are task-oriented. They assume the reader knows the basics and wants to accomplish
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something specific.
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**How-to doc template:**
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```markdown
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# How to [accomplish specific task]
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[One sentence: what you'll accomplish and the end result.]
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## Prerequisites
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[What the reader needs before starting. Be specific — versions, installed tools,
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config state.]
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## Steps
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1. [Action verb] [specific instruction]
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```bash
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[exact command]
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```
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[Expected output or result, if non-obvious.]
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2. [Next step...]
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## Verification
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[How to confirm it worked. A command, a URL to visit, a test to run.]
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## Troubleshooting
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[Common failure modes and their fixes. Pull from tests and error handling code.]
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```
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**Rules for how-to docs:**
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- Title starts with "How to" — no exceptions. This is the reader's entry point.
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- Every step must be actionable. No "consider whether..." — instead "Run X" or "Add Y to Z".
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- Include verification. The reader should never wonder "did it work?"
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- Troubleshooting section is mandatory if the task can fail.
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---
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## Step 6: Write Tutorials
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Tutorials are learning-oriented. They take a newcomer from zero to a working example.
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These are the hardest to write well and the most valuable.
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**Tutorial doc template:**
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```markdown
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# [Tutorial title — describes what you'll build/learn]
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[Opening paragraph: what you'll build, why it's useful, and what you'll understand
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by the end. Keep it concrete — "You'll build a working X that does Y" not
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"This tutorial covers X".]
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## What you'll need
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[Prerequisites: tools, versions, prior knowledge. Link to installation guides.]
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## Step 1: [Set up the foundation]
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[Start from a clean state. Show every command. Explain what each does on first
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encounter — but briefly, not a lecture.]
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```bash
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[exact command]
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```
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[Brief explanation of what just happened.]
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## Step 2: [Build the first working piece]
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[Get to a working, visible result as fast as possible. The reader should see
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something happen within the first 3 steps.]
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...
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## Step N: [Final step]
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## What you built
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[Recap: what the reader now has and what it can do. Link to reference docs
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for deeper exploration. Suggest next steps.]
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```
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**Rules for tutorials:**
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- **Time to first result < 3 steps.** If the reader hasn't seen something work by step 3,
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the tutorial is too slow.
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- Every step must produce a visible change or output. No "now configure X" without showing
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what changes.
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- Use the exact commands the reader will type. No "run the appropriate command" abstractions.
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- Error paths: if a step commonly fails, show the error and the fix inline.
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- End with "What you built" — connect the tutorial back to the real use case.
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---
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## Step 7: Cross-Document Linking & Discoverability
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After writing all documents:
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1. **Add cross-links between quadrants.** Every reference doc should link to its how-to.
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Every how-to should link to its reference. Tutorials should link to both.
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2. **Update entry-point files.** Add references to new docs in:
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- README.md — add to documentation section or table of contents
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- CLAUDE.md / AGENTS.md — add to project structure if relevant
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- Any existing docs index or sidebar config
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3. **Verify discoverability.** Every new document must be reachable within 2 clicks from
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README.md. If a docs framework is in use, add to the sidebar/nav config.
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4. **Check for broken links.** Grep for any `](` references that point to files that don't exist.
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---
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## Step 8: Quality Self-Review
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Before committing, review each document against these criteria:
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**Accuracy gate:**
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- [ ] Every code example compiles / runs / passes if copy-pasted
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- [ ] Every API description matches the actual code signature
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- [ ] Every command shown produces the output described
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- [ ] No stale references to renamed/removed entities
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**Completeness gate:**
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- [ ] Reference docs cover 100% of public surface
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- [ ] How-tos cover the top 3 tasks a user would attempt
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- [ ] Tutorials get to a working result in ≤3 steps
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- [ ] Explanation docs name trade-offs, not just choices
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**Voice gate:**
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- [ ] Written for a smart person who hasn't seen the code
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- [ ] No jargon without brief inline gloss on first use
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- [ ] Active voice, concrete nouns, short sentences
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- [ ] "You can now..." not "The system provides..."
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Fix any failures before proceeding.
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---
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## Step 9: Commit & Output
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1. Stage new documentation files by name (never `git add -A` or `git add .`).
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**Redaction scan before commit.** Generated docs frequently contain example
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credentials; scan the staged doc content and block on a HIGH credential (a
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live-format secret in committed docs is a leak). Example configs belong in
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` ```example ` fences won't excuse a live-format secret, but the per-span
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placeholder filter passes obvious docs examples (e.g. `AKIAIOSFODNN7EXAMPLE`):
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```bash
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REDACT_VIS=$(~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-config get redact_repo_visibility 2>/dev/null)
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[ -z "$REDACT_VIS" ] && REDACT_VIS=$(gh repo view --json visibility -q .visibility 2>/dev/null | tr 'A-Z' 'a-z')
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git diff --cached --no-color | grep '^+' | sed 's/^+//' | \
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~/.claude/skills/gstack/bin/gstack-redact --repo-visibility "${REDACT_VIS:-unknown}" --json
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# exit 3 (HIGH) → unstage the offending doc, remove the secret, re-stage. Do NOT commit.
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```
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2. Create a commit:
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```bash
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git commit -m "$(cat <<'EOF'
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docs: generate [scope] documentation (Diataxis)
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[One-line summary of what was documented]
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Quadrants: [list which quadrants were produced]
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{{CO_AUTHOR_TRAILER}}
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EOF
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)"
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```
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3. Push to the current branch:
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```bash
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git push
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```
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4. **If a PR exists**, update the PR body with a `## Documentation Generated` section listing
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every new file with its Diataxis quadrant and a one-line description:
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```
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## Documentation Generated
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| File | Quadrant | Description |
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|------|----------|-------------|
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| docs/tutorial-getting-started.md | Tutorial | Walk-through from install to first working example |
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| docs/reference-widget-api.md | Reference | Complete widget API with types, defaults, examples |
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| docs/explanation-bayesian-scheduler.md | Explanation | Why the scheduler uses Bayesian inference |
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| docs/howto-custom-widgets.md | How-to | Creating and registering custom widgets |
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```
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5. Output a structured summary:
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```
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Documentation generated:
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Scope: [what was documented]
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Files: [N] new, [M] updated
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Coverage:
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Tutorials: [count] ([list])
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How-tos: [count] ([list])
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Reference: [count] ([list])
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Explanation: [count] ([list])
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Quality: [pass/fail on each gate]
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```
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---
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## Important Rules
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- **Research before writing.** Step 1 is not optional. Read the code, read the tests, read the
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existing docs. Insufficient research produces surface-level documentation.
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- **Accuracy is non-negotiable.** Every code example must work. Every API description must match
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the actual code. If you're unsure about a detail, read the source again — do not guess.
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- **Diataxis quadrants serve different readers.** Do not mix tutorial content into reference docs
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or reference content into how-tos. Each quadrant has a specific reader in a specific mode.
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- **Time to first result in tutorials.** If a reader can't see something working by step 3,
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restructure the tutorial.
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- **Cross-link everything.** Isolated docs are undiscoverable docs.
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- **Voice: friendly, concrete, user-forward.** Write like you're explaining to a smart person
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who hasn't seen the code. Never corporate, never academic.
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- **Completeness over minimalism.** AI makes comprehensive documentation cheap. Don't write
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"minimal viable docs" — write complete docs. Boil the lake.
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