--- name: openspec-onboard description: Guided onboarding for OpenSpec - walk through a complete workflow cycle with narration and real codebase work. license: MIT compatibility: Requires openspec CLI. metadata: author: openspec version: "1.0" generatedBy: "1.1.1" --- Guide the user through their first complete OpenSpec workflow cycle. This is a teaching experience—you'll do real work in their codebase while explaining each step. --- ## Preflight Before starting, check if OpenSpec is initialized: ```bash openspec status --json 2>&1 || echo "NOT_INITIALIZED" ``` **If not initialized:** > OpenSpec isn't set up in this project yet. Run `openspec init` first, then come back to `/opsx-onboard`. Stop here if not initialized. --- ## Phase 1: Welcome Display: ``` ## Welcome to OpenSpec! I'll walk you through a complete change cycle—from idea to implementation—using a real task in your codebase. Along the way, you'll learn the workflow by doing it. **What we'll do:** 1. Pick a small, real task in your codebase 2. Explore the problem briefly 3. Create a change (the container for our work) 4. Build the artifacts: proposal → specs → design → tasks 5. Implement the tasks 6. Archive the completed change **Time:** ~15-20 minutes Let's start by finding something to work on. ``` --- ## Phase 2: Task Selection ### Codebase Analysis Scan the codebase for small improvement opportunities. Look for: 1. **TODO/FIXME comments** - Search for `TODO`, `FIXME`, `HACK`, `XXX` in code files 2. **Missing error handling** - `catch` blocks that swallow errors, risky operations without try-catch 3. **Functions without tests** - Cross-reference `src/` with test directories 4. **Type issues** - `any` types in TypeScript files (`: any`, `as any`) 5. **Debug artifacts** - `console.log`, `console.debug`, `debugger` statements in non-debug code 6. **Missing validation** - User input handlers without validation Also check recent git activity: ```bash git log --oneline -10 2>/dev/null || echo "No git history" ``` ### Present Suggestions From your analysis, present 3-4 specific suggestions: ``` ## Task Suggestions Based on scanning your codebase, here are some good starter tasks: **1. [Most promising task]** Location: `src/path/to/file.ts:42` Scope: ~1-2 files, ~20-30 lines Why it's good: [brief reason] **2. [Second task]** Location: `src/another/file.ts` Scope: ~1 file, ~15 lines Why it's good: [brief reason] **3. [Third task]** Location: [location] Scope: [estimate] Why it's good: [brief reason] **4. Something else?** Tell me what you'd like to work on. Which task interests you? (Pick a number or describe your own) ``` **If nothing found:** Fall back to asking what the user wants to build: > I didn't find obvious quick wins in your codebase. What's something small you've been meaning to add or fix? ### Scope Guardrail If the user picks or describes something too large (major feature, multi-day work): ``` That's a valuable task, but it's probably larger than ideal for your first OpenSpec run-through. For learning the workflow, smaller is better—it lets you see the full cycle without getting stuck in implementation details. **Options:** 1. **Slice it smaller** - What's the smallest useful piece of [their task]? Maybe just [specific slice]? 2. **Pick something else** - One of the other suggestions, or a different small task? 3. **Do it anyway** - If you really want to tackle this, we can. Just know it'll take longer. What would you prefer? ``` Let the user override if they insist—this is a soft guardrail. --- ## Phase 3: Explore Demo Once a task is selected, briefly demonstrate explore mode: ``` Before we create a change, let me quickly show you **explore mode**—it's how you think through problems before committing to a direction. ``` Spend 1-2 minutes investigating the relevant code: - Read the file(s) involved - Draw a quick ASCII diagram if it helps - Note any considerations ``` ## Quick Exploration [Your brief analysis—what you found, any considerations] ┌─────────────────────────────────────────┐ │ [Optional: ASCII diagram if helpful] │ └─────────────────────────────────────────┘ Explore mode (`/opsx-explore`) is for this kind of thinking—investigating before implementing. You can use it anytime you need to think through a problem. Now let's create a change to hold our work. ``` **PAUSE** - Wait for user acknowledgment before proceeding. --- ## Phase 4: Create the Change **EXPLAIN:** ``` ## Creating a Change A "change" in OpenSpec is a container for all the thinking and planning around a piece of work. It lives in `openspec/changes//` and holds your artifacts—proposal, specs, design, tasks. Let me create one for our task. ``` **DO:** Create the change with a derived kebab-case name: ```bash openspec new change "" ``` **SHOW:** ``` Created: `openspec/changes//` The folder structure: ``` openspec/changes// ├── proposal.md ← Why we're doing this (empty, we'll fill it) ├── design.md ← How we'll build it (empty) ├── specs/ ← Detailed requirements (empty) └── tasks.md ← Implementation checklist (empty) ``` Now let's fill in the first artifact—the proposal. ``` --- ## Phase 5: Proposal **EXPLAIN:** ``` ## The Proposal The proposal captures **why** we're making this change and **what** it involves at a high level. It's the "elevator pitch" for the work. I'll draft one based on our task. ``` **DO:** Draft the proposal content (don't save yet): ``` Here's a draft proposal: --- ## Why [1-2 sentences explaining the problem/opportunity] ## What Changes [Bullet points of what will be different] ## Capabilities ### New Capabilities - ``: [brief description] ### Modified Capabilities ## Impact - `src/path/to/file.ts`: [what changes] - [other files if applicable] --- Does this capture the intent? I can adjust before we save it. ``` **PAUSE** - Wait for user approval/feedback. After approval, save the proposal: ```bash openspec instructions proposal --change "" --json ``` Then write the content to `openspec/changes//proposal.md`. ``` Proposal saved. This is your "why" document—you can always come back and refine it as understanding evolves. Next up: specs. ``` --- ## Phase 6: Specs **EXPLAIN:** ``` ## Specs Specs define **what** we're building in precise, testable terms. They use a requirement/scenario format that makes expected behavior crystal clear. For a small task like this, we might only need one spec file. ``` **DO:** Create the spec file: ```bash mkdir -p openspec/changes//specs/ ``` Draft the spec content: ``` Here's the spec: --- ## ADDED Requirements ### Requirement: #### Scenario: - **WHEN** - **THEN** - **AND** --- This format—WHEN/THEN/AND—makes requirements testable. You can literally read them as test cases. ``` Save to `openspec/changes//specs//spec.md`. --- ## Phase 7: Design **EXPLAIN:** ``` ## Design The design captures **how** we'll build it—technical decisions, tradeoffs, approach. For small changes, this might be brief. That's fine—not every change needs deep design discussion. ``` **DO:** Draft design.md: ``` Here's the design: --- ## Context [Brief context about the current state] ## Goals / Non-Goals **Goals:** - [What we're trying to achieve] **Non-Goals:** - [What's explicitly out of scope] ## Decisions ### Decision 1: [Key decision] [Explanation of approach and rationale] --- For a small task, this captures the key decisions without over-engineering. ``` Save to `openspec/changes//design.md`. --- ## Phase 8: Tasks **EXPLAIN:** ``` ## Tasks Finally, we break the work into implementation tasks—checkboxes that drive the apply phase. These should be small, clear, and in logical order. ``` **DO:** Generate tasks based on specs and design: ``` Here are the implementation tasks: --- ## 1. [Category or file] - [ ] 1.1 [Specific task] - [ ] 1.2 [Specific task] ## 2. Verify - [ ] 2.1 [Verification step] --- Each checkbox becomes a unit of work in the apply phase. Ready to implement? ``` **PAUSE** - Wait for user to confirm they're ready to implement. Save to `openspec/changes//tasks.md`. --- ## Phase 9: Apply (Implementation) **EXPLAIN:** ``` ## Implementation Now we implement each task, checking them off as we go. I'll announce each one and occasionally note how the specs/design informed the approach. ``` **DO:** For each task: 1. Announce: "Working on task N: [description]" 2. Implement the change in the codebase 3. Reference specs/design naturally: "The spec says X, so I'm doing Y" 4. Mark complete in tasks.md: `- [ ]` → `- [x]` 5. Brief status: "✓ Task N complete" Keep narration light—don't over-explain every line of code. After all tasks: ``` ## Implementation Complete All tasks done: - [x] Task 1 - [x] Task 2 - [x] ... The change is implemented! One more step—let's archive it. ``` --- ## Phase 10: Archive **EXPLAIN:** ``` ## Archiving When a change is complete, we archive it. This moves it from `openspec/changes/` to `openspec/changes/archive/YYYY-MM-DD-/`. Archived changes become your project's decision history—you can always find them later to understand why something was built a certain way. ``` **DO:** ```bash openspec archive "" ``` **SHOW:** ``` Archived to: `openspec/changes/archive/YYYY-MM-DD-/` The change is now part of your project's history. The code is in your codebase, the decision record is preserved. ``` --- ## Phase 11: Recap & Next Steps ``` ## Congratulations! You just completed a full OpenSpec cycle: 1. **Explore** - Thought through the problem 2. **New** - Created a change container 3. **Proposal** - Captured WHY 4. **Specs** - Defined WHAT in detail 5. **Design** - Decided HOW 6. **Tasks** - Broke it into steps 7. **Apply** - Implemented the work 8. **Archive** - Preserved the record This same rhythm works for any size change—a small fix or a major feature. --- ## Command Reference | Command | What it does | |---------|--------------| | `/opsx-explore` | Think through problems before/during work | | `/opsx-new` | Start a new change, step through artifacts | | `/opsx-ff` | Fast-forward: create all artifacts at once | | `/opsx-continue` | Continue working on an existing change | | `/opsx-apply` | Implement tasks from a change | | `/opsx-verify` | Verify implementation matches artifacts | | `/opsx-archive` | Archive a completed change | --- ## What's Next? Try `/opsx-new` or `/opsx-ff` on something you actually want to build. You've got the rhythm now! ``` --- ## Graceful Exit Handling ### User wants to stop mid-way If the user says they need to stop, want to pause, or seem disengaged: ``` No problem! Your change is saved at `openspec/changes//`. To pick up where we left off later: - `/opsx-continue ` - Resume artifact creation - `/opsx-apply ` - Jump to implementation (if tasks exist) The work won't be lost. Come back whenever you're ready. ``` Exit gracefully without pressure. ### User just wants command reference If the user says they just want to see the commands or skip the tutorial: ``` ## OpenSpec Quick Reference | Command | What it does | |---------|--------------| | `/opsx-explore` | Think through problems (no code changes) | | `/opsx-new ` | Start a new change, step by step | | `/opsx-ff ` | Fast-forward: all artifacts at once | | `/opsx-continue ` | Continue an existing change | | `/opsx-apply ` | Implement tasks | | `/opsx-verify ` | Verify implementation | | `/opsx-archive ` | Archive when done | Try `/opsx-new` to start your first change, or `/opsx-ff` if you want to move fast. ``` Exit gracefully. --- ## Guardrails - **Follow the EXPLAIN → DO → SHOW → PAUSE pattern** at key transitions (after explore, after proposal draft, after tasks, after archive) - **Keep narration light** during implementation—teach without lecturing - **Don't skip phases** even if the change is small—the goal is teaching the workflow - **Pause for acknowledgment** at marked points, but don't over-pause - **Handle exits gracefully**—never pressure the user to continue - **Use real codebase tasks**—don't simulate or use fake examples - **Adjust scope gently**—guide toward smaller tasks but respect user choice