grove-spec-writing — community grove-spec-writing, GroveScout, community, ide skills, Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf

v1.0.0

À propos de ce Skill

Parfait pour les agents de rédaction technique ayant besoin de créer et de réviser des spécifications normalisées dans l'écosystème Grove. Write and validate Grove technical specifications with consistent formatting, ASCII art headers, diagrams, and the Grove voice. Use when creating new specs, reviewing existing specs for completeness, or standardizing spec formatting.

AutumnsGrove AutumnsGrove
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Updated: 3/9/2026

Killer-Skills Review

Decision support comes first. Repository text comes second.

Reference-Only Page Review Score: 9/11

This page remains useful for operators, but Killer-Skills treats it as reference material instead of a primary organic landing page.

Original recommendation layer Concrete use-case guidance Explicit limitations and caution Quality floor passed for review
Review Score
9/11
Quality Score
57
Canonical Locale
en
Detected Body Locale
en

Parfait pour les agents de rédaction technique ayant besoin de créer et de réviser des spécifications normalisées dans l'écosystème Grove. Write and validate Grove technical specifications with consistent formatting, ASCII art headers, diagrams, and the Grove voice. Use when creating new specs, reviewing existing specs for completeness, or standardizing spec formatting.

Pourquoi utiliser cette compétence

Permet aux agents de créer et de valider des spécifications techniques avec des en-têtes d'art ASCII, des diagrammes et un frontmatter standardisé, garantissant la complétude et la cohérence des fichiers de spécifications en utilisant les protocoles de l'écosystème Grove.

Meilleur pour

Parfait pour les agents de rédaction technique ayant besoin de créer et de réviser des spécifications normalisées dans l'écosystème Grove.

Cas d'utilisation exploitables for grove-spec-writing

Créer de nouvelles spécifications techniques avec un formatage standardisé
Réviser les spécifications existantes pour garantir la complétude et la cohérence
Ajouter des éléments visuels tels que des diagrammes et des maquettes aux spécifications lourdes de texte
Standardiser le frontmatter dans plusieurs fichiers de spécifications

! Sécurité et Limitations

  • Nécessite une connaissance de l'écosystème Grove
  • Limité aux spécifications basées sur le texte
  • Dépend de la compatibilité du format de fichier de spécifications

Why this page is reference-only

  • - Current locale does not satisfy the locale-governance contract.

Source Boundary

The section below is supporting source material from the upstream repository. Use the Killer-Skills review above as the primary decision layer.

Labs Demo

Browser Sandbox Environment

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Boot Container Sandbox

FAQ & Installation Steps

These questions and steps mirror the structured data on this page for better search understanding.

? Frequently Asked Questions

What is grove-spec-writing?

Parfait pour les agents de rédaction technique ayant besoin de créer et de réviser des spécifications normalisées dans l'écosystème Grove. Write and validate Grove technical specifications with consistent formatting, ASCII art headers, diagrams, and the Grove voice. Use when creating new specs, reviewing existing specs for completeness, or standardizing spec formatting.

How do I install grove-spec-writing?

Run the command: npx killer-skills add AutumnsGrove/GroveScout/grove-spec-writing. It works with Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, Claude Code, and 19+ other IDEs.

What are the use cases for grove-spec-writing?

Key use cases include: Créer de nouvelles spécifications techniques avec un formatage standardisé, Réviser les spécifications existantes pour garantir la complétude et la cohérence, Ajouter des éléments visuels tels que des diagrammes et des maquettes aux spécifications lourdes de texte, Standardiser le frontmatter dans plusieurs fichiers de spécifications.

Which IDEs are compatible with grove-spec-writing?

This skill is compatible with Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, Trae, Claude Code, OpenClaw, Aider, Codex, OpenCode, Goose, Cline, Roo Code, Kiro, Augment Code, Continue, GitHub Copilot, Sourcegraph Cody, and Amazon Q Developer. Use the Killer-Skills CLI for universal one-command installation.

Are there any limitations for grove-spec-writing?

Nécessite une connaissance de l'écosystème Grove. Limité aux spécifications basées sur le texte. Dépend de la compatibilité du format de fichier de spécifications.

How To Install

  1. 1. Open your terminal

    Open the terminal or command line in your project directory.

  2. 2. Run the install command

    Run: npx killer-skills add AutumnsGrove/GroveScout/grove-spec-writing. The CLI will automatically detect your IDE or AI agent and configure the skill.

  3. 3. Start using the skill

    The skill is now active. Your AI agent can use grove-spec-writing immediately in the current project.

! Reference-Only Mode

This page remains useful for installation and reference, but Killer-Skills no longer treats it as a primary indexable landing page. Read the review above before relying on the upstream repository instructions.

Imported Repository Instructions

The section below is supporting source material from the upstream repository. Use the Killer-Skills review above as the primary decision layer.

Supporting Evidence

grove-spec-writing

Install grove-spec-writing, an AI agent skill for AI agent workflows and automation. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf with one-command setup.

SKILL.md
Readonly
Imported Repository Instructions
The section below is supporting source material from the upstream repository. Use the Killer-Skills review above as the primary decision layer.
Supporting Evidence

Grove Spec Writing

A comprehensive guide for writing technical specifications in the Grove ecosystem. Use this skill to create new specs that feel like storybook entries, or to validate and standardize existing specs.

When to Activate

  • Creating a new technical specification
  • Reviewing an existing spec for completeness
  • Adding ASCII art headers to specs missing them
  • Adding diagrams, mockups, or visual elements to text-heavy specs
  • Standardizing frontmatter across spec files
  • Validating a spec against Grove standards before finalizing

The Spec as Storybook Entry

Grove specs aren't just technical documents. They're storybook entries in a larger narrative. Each spec should feel like opening a page in a beautifully illustrated field guide to the forest.

The formula:

  1. Cover page (frontmatter + ASCII art + tagline)
  2. Introduction (what is this, in nature and in Grove)
  3. The journey (architecture, flows, implementation)
  4. The details (API, schema, security)
  5. The path forward (implementation checklist)

Required Structure

1. Frontmatter (REQUIRED)

Every spec MUST have this exact frontmatter format:

yaml
1--- 2aliases: [] 3date created: [Day], [Month] [Ordinal] [Year] 4date modified: [Day], [Month] [Ordinal] [Year] 5tags: 6 - primary-domain 7 - tech-stack 8 - category 9type: tech-spec 10---

Date format examples:

  • Monday, December 29th 2025
  • Saturday, January 4th 2026

Type options:

  • tech-spec — Technical specification (most common)
  • implementation-plan — Step-by-step implementation guide
  • index — Index/navigation document

2. ASCII Art Header (REQUIRED)

Immediately after frontmatter, include a code block with ASCII art that visually represents the concept:

# [Name] — [Short Description]

     ASCII ART HERE
     representing the concept
     in a visual way

> *Poetic tagline in italics*

Good ASCII art:

  • Relates to the nature metaphor (forest, garden, etc.)
  • Represents the concept visually (layers for backup, rings for analytics)
  • Uses box-drawing characters: ─│┌┐└┘├┤┬┴┼╭╮╰╯
  • Uses nature emoji sparingly: 🌲🌿🍂✨🌸
  • Includes a poetic tagline or motto

Examples from excellent specs:

Wisp (will-o'-the-wisp light):

         🌲  🌲  🌲
          \   |   /
           \  |  /
             ✨
            ╱ ╲
           ╱   ╲
          ╱  ·  ╲
         ╱   ·   ╲
        ╱    ·    ╲
       ·     ·     ·
         gentle
         guiding
          light

Patina (layered backups):

                     ╭───────────────────╮
                    ╭┤  ┌─────────────┐  ├╮
                   ╭┤│  │  2026-01-05 │  │├╮
                   │││  │  ▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓▓ │  │││
                   │││  │  ▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒▒ │  │││
                   │││  │  ░░░░░░░░░░ │  │││
                   │││  │  ·········· │  │││
                   ╰┴┴──└─────────────┘──┴┴╯
                  ╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱╱
               ──────────────────────────────
              ~~~~~~~~ oxidation layer ~~~~~~~~
              Age as armor. Time as protection.

Heartwood (tree rings):

                      ╭──────────╮
                   ╭──│ ╭──────╮ │──╮
                 ╭─│  │ │ ╭──╮ │ │  │─╮
                │  │  │ │ │♥ │ │ │  │  │
                 ╰─│  │ │ ╰──╯ │ │  │─╯
                   ╰──│ ╰──────╯ │──╯
                      ╰──────────╯

       every ring: a year, a story, a layer of growth

               The center that holds it all.

3. Introduction Section

After the ASCII art header:

markdown
1> *Poetic tagline repeated* 2 3[2-3 sentence description of what this is in the Grove ecosystem] 4 5**Public Name:** [Name] 6**Internal Name:** Grove[Name] 7**Domain:** `name.grove.place` 8**Repository:** [Link if applicable] 9**Last Updated:** [Month Year] 10 11[1-2 paragraphs explaining the nature metaphor and how it applies] 12 13---

4. Body Sections

Organize content with clear headers. Include:

  • Overview/Goals — What this system does
  • Architecture — How it's built (with diagrams!)
  • Tech Stack — Dependencies, frameworks
  • API/Schema — Technical details
  • Security — Important considerations
  • Implementation Checklist — Clear action items

Required Visual Elements

Flow Diagrams

Every spec describing a process MUST include at least one ASCII flow diagram:

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│                         Client Sites                                │
│  ┌──────────────┐  ┌──────────────┐  ┌──────────────┐               │
│  │   Site A     │  │   Site B     │  │   Site C     │               │
│  └──────┬───────┘  └──────┬───────┘  └──────┬───────┘               │
└─────────┼─────────────────┼─────────────────┼───────────────────────┘
          │                 │                 │
          │    1. Request   │                 │
          ▼                 ▼                 ▼
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│                        Central Service                              │
│                                                                     │
│  ┌─────────────────────────┐  ┌─────────────────────────┐           │
│  │      Handler A          │  │      Handler B          │           │
│  └─────────────────────────┘  └─────────────────────────┘           │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Box drawing reference:

  • Corners: ┌ ┐ └ ┘ (square) or ╭ ╮ ╰ ╯ (rounded)
  • Lines: ─ │ ═ ║
  • Joins: ├ ┤ ┬ ┴ ┼
  • Arrows: → ← ↑ ↓ ▶ ◀ ▲ ▼

UI Mockups

Specs describing user interfaces MUST include ASCII mockups:

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  ✧ Panel Title                                          [×]      │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│                                                                 │
│  ┌─ Label ────────────────────────────────────────────────┐     │
│  │ Content here with proper spacing                       │     │
│  └────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘     │
│                                                                 │
│  ┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐    │
│  │ Input field...                                     [↵]  │    │
│  └─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘    │
│                                                                 │
│  ───────────────────────────────────────────────────────────    │
│  [ Action A ]                              [ Action B ✦ ]       │
│                                                                 │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

State Diagrams

For features with multiple states:

   Idle:                    Analyzing:               Success:
   .  *  .    .  *         . * . analyzing . *           *
  .    _    .      .         \  |  /             .    *  /|\   .
     /   \    *  .         -- (o.o) --  thinking    *   / | \    *
    / ~ ~ \  .    .          /  |  \                   /__|__\
   /       \______        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~       ~~~~/       \~~~~
  ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~       words flowing...        all clear

Comparison Tables

Use tables to compare options, states, or configurations:

markdown
1| Feature | Seedling | Sapling | Oak | Evergreen | 2|---------|----------|---------|-----|-----------| 3| Posts | 50 | 250 ||| 4| Storage | 1 GB | 5 GB | 20 GB | 100 GB | 5| Themes | 3 | 10 | All | All + custom |

Timeline/Retention Diagrams

For anything involving time:

  TODAY                                              12 WEEKS AGO
    │                                                      │
    ▼                                                      ▼
   ┌─┬─┬─┬─┬─┬─┬─┐                                        ┌─┐
   │█│█│█│█│█│█│█│ ◀── Daily backups (7 days)             │░│
   └─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┴─┘                                        └─┘
   S M T W T F S

Validation Checklist

Before finalizing any spec, verify:

Structure

  • Frontmatter present with all required fields
  • aliases: [] included (even if empty)
  • Date format correct (Day, Month Ordinal Year)
  • type: tech-spec or appropriate type
  • ASCII art header present after frontmatter
  • Poetic tagline in italics
  • Public/Internal names listed
  • Domain specified (if applicable)

Visual Content

  • At least one ASCII flow diagram (if process-based)
  • UI mockups included (if describing interface)
  • Tables for comparisons where appropriate
  • Code blocks for technical details
  • No walls of text without visual breaks

Voice (refer to grove-documentation skill)

  • No em-dashes (use periods or commas)
  • No "not X, but Y" patterns
  • No AI-coded words (robust, seamless, leverage, etc.)
  • Short paragraphs
  • Poetic closers earned, not forced

Completeness

  • Overview/Goals section
  • Architecture diagram
  • Technical details (API, schema)
  • Security considerations
  • Implementation checklist

Creating ASCII Art

The Process

  1. Identify the core metaphor — What natural thing does this represent?
  2. Sketch the concept — What visual would convey this at a glance?
  3. Choose your characters — Box drawing, emoji, or creative ASCII
  4. Build in layers — Start with outline, add detail, add flourishes
  5. Add the tagline — Poetic one-liner that captures the essence

Character Palette

Box Drawing (safe, consistent):

┌─────┬─────┐    ╭─────╮
│     │     │    │     │
├─────┼─────┤    ╰─────╯
│     │     │
└─────┴─────┘

Lines and Arrows:

→ ← ↑ ↓ ↔ ↕
▶ ◀ ▲ ▼
⟿ ⟸ ⟹

Nature Emoji (use sparingly):

🌲 🌳 🌿 🍂 🍃 🌸 🌺 🌻 🌷 🌱 🍄
☀️ 🌤️ ⭐ ✨ 💧 🔥
🦋 🐛 🐌

Decorative:

· ∙ • ° ˚ ∘
~ ≈ ∿
═ ║ ╔ ╗ ╚ ╝
░ ▒ ▓ █

Tips

  • Keep ASCII art under 20 lines tall
  • Center the art within its code block
  • Include breathing room (empty lines above/below)
  • Test in a monospace font
  • Consider mobile rendering (simpler is better)

Example: Complete Spec Header

markdown
1--- 2aliases: [] 3date created: Monday, January 6th 2026 4date modified: Monday, January 13th 2026 5tags: 6 - support 7 - user-communication 8 - cloudflare-workers 9type: tech-spec 10--- 11 12# Porch — Support System 13
                          🏠
                       ___│___
                      │       │
                ~~~~~~│ PORCH │~~~~~~
                     ╱│_______│╲
                    ╱           ╲
                   ╱  ┌───┐      ╲
                  ╱   │ ☕ │       ╲
                 ╱    └───┘ 👤     ╲
                ════════════════════════
                       steps

          Have a seat. We'll figure it out.

> *Have a seat on the porch. We'll figure it out together.*

Grove's front porch: a warm, accessible space where users sit down and have a conversation. Not a corporate help desk with ticket numbers. A porch where you chat with the grove keeper about what's going on.

**Public Name:** Porch
**Internal Name:** GrovePorch
**Domain:** `porch.grove.place`
**Status:** Planned (Launch Priority)

A porch is where you sit and talk. You come up the steps, have a seat, and the grove keeper comes out to chat. It's not a ticket counter. It's two people on a porch, figuring things out together.

---

Integration with Other Skills

Before Writing a Spec

  1. walking-through-the-grove — If naming a new feature, complete the naming journey first
  2. grove-ui-design — If the spec involves UI, understand design patterns

While Writing

  1. grove-documentation — Apply Grove voice throughout, avoid AI patterns

After Writing

  1. grove-spec-writing (this skill) — Run validation checklist
  2. Review with fresh eyes: Does it feel like a storybook entry?

When to Use museum-documentation Instead

This skill (grove-spec-writing) is for internal technical specifications: architecture decisions, system design, implementation plans. Documentation for developers.

Use museum-documentation when writing for Wanderers who want to understand:

Use grove-spec-writingUse museum-documentation
Technical specifications"How it works" for curious visitors
Architecture decisionsCodebase guided tours
Implementation plansKnowledge base exhibits
Internal system docsNarrative technical explanations

If the reader is a developer implementing something, use this skill. If the reader is a Wanderer exploring the forest, use museum-documentation.


Quick Reference

ElementRequiredLocation
FrontmatterYesTop of file
ASCII art headerYesAfter frontmatter
Poetic taglineYesAfter ASCII art
Public/Internal namesYesIntroduction
Architecture diagramIf applicableBody
UI mockupsIf has UIBody
Implementation checklistYesEnd of spec

A good spec is one you'd want to read at 2 AM. Make it beautiful.

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