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openspec-apply-change

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npx machina-cli add skill azzgo/agent-skills/openspec-apply-change --openclaw
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SKILL.md
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Implement tasks from an OpenSpec change.

Input: Optionally specify a change name. If omitted, check if it can be inferred from conversation context. If vague or ambiguous you MUST prompt for available changes.

Steps

  1. Select the change

    If a name is provided, use it. Otherwise:

    • Infer from conversation context if the user mentioned a change
    • Auto-select if only one active change exists
    • If ambiguous, run openspec list --json to get available changes and use the AskUserQuestion tool to let the user select

    Always announce: "Using change: <name>" and how to override (e.g., /opsx-apply <other>).

  2. Check status to understand the schema

    openspec status --change "<name>" --json
    

    Parse the JSON to understand:

    • schemaName: The workflow being used (e.g., "spec-driven")
    • Which artifact contains the tasks (typically "tasks" for spec-driven, check status for others)
  3. Get apply instructions

    openspec instructions apply --change "<name>" --json
    

    This returns:

    • Context file paths (varies by schema - could be proposal/specs/design/tasks or spec/tests/implementation/docs)
    • Progress (total, complete, remaining)
    • Task list with status
    • Dynamic instruction based on current state

    Handle states:

    • If state: "blocked" (missing artifacts): show message, suggest using openspec-continue-change
    • If state: "all_done": congratulate, suggest archive
    • Otherwise: proceed to implementation
  4. Read context files

    Read the files listed in contextFiles from the apply instructions output. The files depend on the schema being used:

    • spec-driven: proposal, specs, design, tasks
    • Other schemas: follow the contextFiles from CLI output
  5. Show current progress

    Display:

    • Schema being used
    • Progress: "N/M tasks complete"
    • Remaining tasks overview
    • Dynamic instruction from CLI
  6. Implement tasks (loop until done or blocked)

    For each pending task:

    • Show which task is being worked on
    • Make the code changes required
    • Keep changes minimal and focused
    • Mark task complete in the tasks file: - [ ]- [x]
    • Continue to next task

    Pause if:

    • Task is unclear → ask for clarification
    • Implementation reveals a design issue → suggest updating artifacts
    • Error or blocker encountered → report and wait for guidance
    • User interrupts
  7. On completion or pause, show status

    Display:

    • Tasks completed this session
    • Overall progress: "N/M tasks complete"
    • If all done: suggest archive
    • If paused: explain why and wait for guidance

Output During Implementation

## Implementing: <change-name> (schema: <schema-name>)

Working on task 3/7: <task description>
[...implementation happening...]
✓ Task complete

Working on task 4/7: <task description>
[...implementation happening...]
✓ Task complete

Output On Completion

## Implementation Complete

**Change:** <change-name>
**Schema:** <schema-name>
**Progress:** 7/7 tasks complete ✓

### Completed This Session
- [x] Task 1
- [x] Task 2
...

All tasks complete! Ready to archive this change.

Output On Pause (Issue Encountered)

## Implementation Paused

**Change:** <change-name>
**Schema:** <schema-name>
**Progress:** 4/7 tasks complete

### Issue Encountered
<description of the issue>

**Options:**
1. <option 1>
2. <option 2>
3. Other approach

What would you like to do?

Guardrails

  • Keep going through tasks until done or blocked
  • Always read context files before starting (from the apply instructions output)
  • If task is ambiguous, pause and ask before implementing
  • If implementation reveals issues, pause and suggest artifact updates
  • Keep code changes minimal and scoped to each task
  • Update task checkbox immediately after completing each task
  • Pause on errors, blockers, or unclear requirements - don't guess
  • Use contextFiles from CLI output, don't assume specific file names

Fluid Workflow Integration

This skill supports the "actions on a change" model:

  • Can be invoked anytime: Before all artifacts are done (if tasks exist), after partial implementation, interleaved with other actions
  • Allows artifact updates: If implementation reveals design issues, suggest updating artifacts - not phase-locked, work fluidly

Source

git clone https://github.com/azzgo/agent-skills/blob/main/.opencode/skills/openspec-apply-change/SKILL.mdView on GitHub

Overview

This skill implements tasks from an OpenSpec change, guiding you through selecting a change, checking status, reading context files, and implementing tasks until completion or pause. It updates task states and provides progress guidance to keep work aligned with the OpenSpec workflow.

How This Skill Works

It uses the OpenSpec CLI to fetch the current change status and apply instructions, reads the listed context files (proposal/specs/design/tasks for spec-driven workflows), and displays progress. It then iterates through pending tasks, applying minimal changes, marking them complete, and looping until all tasks are done or a blocker requires guidance.

When to Use It

  • When you want to start implementing a new OpenSpec change and specify a name (or let the system infer it).
  • When you need to continue an in-progress change and pick up where you left off.
  • When you want to understand the schema and context (status, schemaName, and contextFiles) before coding.
  • When you want to review current progress and remaining tasks before proceeding.
  • When you encounter blockers or ambiguities and need guidance or alternatives.

Quick Start

  1. Step 1: Optionally specify a change name; the system announces 'Using change: <name>' and allows override with '/opsx-apply <other>'.
  2. Step 2: Run status and instructions apply to fetch schema, contextFiles, and task list.
  3. Step 3: Implement each pending task, mark it complete, and re-check progress until all tasks are done.

Best Practices

  • Always announce the change being worked on: 'Using change: <name>'.
  • Read the status and context files before starting any implementation.
  • Keep changes small and focused; update the task line from '- [ ]' to '- [x]' as you complete tasks.
  • Pause for clarification or to address blockers rather than forcing progress.
  • Document decisions and progress; aim to complete all tasks before archiving the change.

Example Use Cases

  • Starting a new change named 'openspec-abc' and confirming the change is selected.
  • Continuing a long-running change by checking 'openspec status --change' and applying the next task.
  • Encountering a 'blocked' state due to missing artifacts and following guidance to run openspec-continue-change.
  • Reading context files like proposal, specs, design, and tasks to implement a specific task.
  • All tasks completed and the system outputs 'All tasks complete! Ready to archive'.

Frequently Asked Questions

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