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planning-and-task-breakdown

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Planning and Task Breakdown

Overview

Decompose work into small, verifiable tasks with explicit acceptance criteria. Good task breakdown is the difference between an agent that completes work reliably and one that produces a tangled mess. Every task should be small enough to implement, test, and verify in a single focused session.

When to Use

  • You have a spec and need to break it into implementable units
  • A task feels too large or vague to start
  • Work needs to be parallelized across multiple agents or sessions
  • You need to communicate scope to a human
  • The implementation order isn't obvious

When NOT to use: Single-file changes with obvious scope, or when the spec already contains well-defined tasks.

The Planning Process

Step 1: Enter Plan Mode

Before writing any code, operate in read-only mode:

  • Read the spec and relevant codebase sections
  • Identify existing patterns and conventions
  • Map dependencies between components
  • Note risks and unknowns

Do NOT write code during planning. The output is a plan document, not implementation.

Step 2: Identify the Dependency Graph

Map what depends on what:

Database schema
    │
    ├── API models/types
    │       │
    │       ├── API endpoints
    │       │       │
    │       │       └── Frontend API client
    │       │               │
    │       │               └── UI components
    │       │
    │       └── Validation logic
    │
    └── Seed data / migrations

Implementation order follows the dependency graph bottom-up: build foundations first.

Step 3: Slice Vertically

Instead of building all the database, then all the API, then all the UI — build one complete feature path at a time:

Bad (horizontal slicing):

Task 1: Build entire database schema
Task 2: Build all API endpoints
Task 3: Build all UI components
Task 4: Connect everything

Good (vertical slicing):

Task 1: User can create an account (schema + API + UI for registration)
Task 2: User can log in (auth schema + API + UI for login)
Task 3: User can create a task (task schema + API + UI for creation)
Task 4: User can view task list (query + API + UI for list view)

Each vertical slice delivers working, testable functionality.

Step 4: Write Tasks

Each task follows this structure:

## Task [N]: [Short descriptive title]

**Description:** One paragraph explaining what this task accomplishes.

**Acceptance criteria:**
- [ ] [Specific, testable condition]
- [ ] [Specific, testable condition]

**Verification:**
- [ ] Tests pass: `npm test -- --grep "feature-name"`
- [ ] Build succeeds: `npm run build`
- [ ] Manual check: [description of what to verify]

**Dependencies:** [Task numbers this depends on, or "None"]

**Files likely touched:**
- `src/path/to/file.ts`
- `tests/path/to/test.ts`

**Estimated scope:** [Small: 1-2 files | Medium: 3-5 files | Large: 5+ files]

Step 5: Order and Checkpoint

Arrange tasks so that:

  1. Dependencies are satisfied (build foundation first)
  2. Each task leaves the system in a working state
  3. Verification checkpoints occur after every 2-3 tasks
  4. High-risk tasks are early (fail fast)

Add explicit checkpoints:

## Checkpoint: After Tasks 1-3
- [ ] All tests pass
- [ ] Application builds without errors
- [ ] Core user flow works end-to-end
- [ ] Review with human before proceeding

Task Sizing Guidelines

SizeFilesScopeExample
XS1Single function or config changeAdd a validation rule
S1-2One component or endpointAdd a new API endpoint
M3-5One feature sliceUser registration flow
L5-8Multi-component featureSearch with filtering and pagination
XL8+Too large — break it down further

If a task is L or larger, it should be broken into smaller tasks. An agent performs best on S and M tasks.

Plan Document Template

# Implementation Plan: [Feature/Project Name]

## Overview
[One paragraph summary of what we're building]

## Architecture Decisions
- [Key decision 1 and rationale]
- [Key decision 2 and rationale]

## Task List

### Phase 1: Foundation
- [ ] Task 1: ...
- [ ] Task 2: ...

### Checkpoint: Foundation
- [ ] Tests pass, builds clean

### Phase 2: Core Features
- [ ] Task 3: ...
- [ ] Task 4: ...

### Checkpoint: Core Features
- [ ] End-to-end flow works

### Phase 3: Polish
- [ ] Task 5: ...
- [ ] Task 6: ...

### Checkpoint: Complete
- [ ] All acceptance criteria met
- [ ] Ready for review

## Risks and Mitigations
| Risk | Impact | Mitigation |
|------|--------|------------|
| [Risk] | [High/Med/Low] | [Strategy] |

## Open Questions
- [Question needing human input]

Parallelization Opportunities

When multiple agents or sessions are available:

  • Safe to parallelize: Independent feature slices, tests for already-implemented features, documentation
  • Must be sequential: Database migrations, shared state changes, dependency chains
  • Needs coordination: Features that share an API contract (define the contract first, then parallelize)

Common Rationalizations

RationalizationReality
"I'll figure it out as I go"That's how you end up with a tangled mess and rework. 10 minutes of planning saves hours.
"The tasks are obvious"Write them down anyway. Explicit tasks surface hidden dependencies and forgotten edge cases.
"Planning is overhead"Planning is the task. Implementation without a plan is just typing.
"I can hold it all in my head"Context windows are finite. Written plans survive session boundaries and compaction.

Red Flags

  • Starting implementation without a written task list
  • Tasks that say "implement the feature" without acceptance criteria
  • No verification steps in the plan
  • All tasks are XL-sized
  • No checkpoints between tasks
  • Dependency order isn't considered

Verification

Before starting implementation, confirm:

  • Every task has acceptance criteria
  • Every task has a verification step
  • Task dependencies are identified and ordered correctly
  • No task touches more than ~5 files
  • Checkpoints exist between major phases
  • The human has reviewed and approved the plan

Source

git clone https://github.com/addyosmani/agent-skills/blob/main/skills/planning-and-task-breakdown/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

Planning and Task Breakdown helps decompose work into small, verifiable tasks with explicit acceptance criteria. A good plan ensures each task is implementable, testable, and verifiable in a focused session, reducing tangled outcomes and misaligned scope.

How This Skill Works

Begin in Plan Mode to study the spec without coding, map dependencies across components, and identify risks. Then slice work vertically into end-to-end feature paths and write each task with clear acceptance criteria, dependencies, and verification steps. This approach enables parallel work, predictable delivery, and easier human communication of scope.

When to Use It

  • You have a spec and need to break it into implementable units
  • A task feels too large or vague to start
  • Work needs to be parallelized across multiple agents or sessions
  • You need to communicate scope to a human
  • The implementation order isn't obvious

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Enter Plan Mode
  2. Step 2: Identify the Dependency Graph
  3. Step 3: Slice Vertically and Write Tasks

Best Practices

  • Operate in read-only Plan Mode before writing any code
  • Map a dependency graph to reveal build order and risks
  • Slice work vertically to deliver end-to-end features per task
  • Write each task with a concise description, acceptance criteria, and dependencies
  • Use explicit checkpoints to validate progress after groups of tasks

Example Use Cases

  • Break a feature into account creation, login, and task management (UI+API+data) with separate tasks
  • Split a vague ticket into smaller tasks so multiple engineers can work in parallel
  • Communicate scope to a product stakeholder using a task-based plan
  • Plan a refactor by incremental vertical slices to avoid big-bang changes
  • Plan adding a new API endpoint with a dedicated UI screen, instead of building all backend first

Frequently Asked Questions

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