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issue-writing

Use this skill when writing, reviewing, or discussing issue descriptions, acceptance criteria, or task breakdowns. Ensures consistent, high-quality issue structure that any developer or AI can pick up and execute. Triggers when drafting issues, defining requirements, or when users ask "how should I write this issue?" or "what should the acceptance criteria be?"

$ Installieren

git clone https://github.com/jclfocused/claude-agents /tmp/claude-agents && cp -r /tmp/claude-agents/custom_plugins/plugins/linear-planning-workflow/skills/issue-writing ~/.claude/skills/claude-agents

// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill


name: issue-writing description: Use this skill when writing, reviewing, or discussing issue descriptions, acceptance criteria, or task breakdowns. Ensures consistent, high-quality issue structure that any developer or AI can pick up and execute. Triggers when drafting issues, defining requirements, or when users ask "how should I write this issue?" or "what should the acceptance criteria be?"

Issue Writing Skill

This skill guides the creation of well-structured, actionable Linear issues that any developer or AI can pick up and execute independently.

When to Use

Apply this skill when:

  • Writing or drafting issue descriptions
  • Defining acceptance criteria for tasks
  • Breaking down features into sub-issues
  • Reviewing existing issues for clarity
  • Users ask how to document requirements

Issue Structure: Parent Feature Issues

## IMPORTANT: Linear Issue Discipline
[Standard discipline rules]

---

## Problem
[1-2 sentences: Why does this feature need to exist?]

## Solution
[1-2 sentences: What are we building to solve this?]

## High-Level Implementation
[Bullet points: Key technical decisions, patterns]

## Codebase Investigation Findings
[What patterns to follow, similar features, code locations]

## Out of Scope / Deferred
[Explicitly list what we're NOT doing]

Issue Structure: Sub-Issues / Tasks

## Objective
[1-2 sentences: What specific thing needs to be done?]

## Acceptance Criteria
- [ ] [Specific, testable criterion 1]
- [ ] [Specific, testable criterion 2]
- [ ] [Specific, testable criterion 3]

## Implementation Notes
- Relevant files: [paths]
- Patterns to follow: [reference]
- Dependencies: [other issues]

Writing Good Acceptance Criteria (SMART)

  • Specific: Clear about what exactly needs to happen
  • Measurable: Can objectively verify if it's done
  • Achievable: Within scope of this single issue
  • Relevant: Directly related to the objective
  • Testable: Can be validated by running/checking

Principles for Issue Writing

  1. Self-Contained Context - Everything needed to understand and execute
  2. What, Not How - Describe outcome, not implementation
  3. Appropriate Granularity - Not too big, not too small
  4. Link to Resources - Design, API docs, related issues
  5. State Assumptions - Make implicit expectations explicit

Anti-Patterns to Avoid

  • Vague objectives: "Improve the dashboard"
  • Missing acceptance criteria: Assuming it's obvious
  • Implementation prescription: Over-specifying the how
  • Hidden dependencies: Not mentioning blockers
  • Scope creep: Adding "nice to haves"

Mermaid Diagrams in Linear Issues

ALWAYS include Mermaid diagrams when applicable. Linear supports Mermaid diagrams natively in issue descriptions. Use them to visualize:

  • User flows and interaction sequences
  • Data flow and processing pipelines
  • State machines and lifecycle transitions
  • Component relationships and dependencies
  • API/service interaction patterns
  • Entity relationships and data models

Mermaid Syntax in Linear

Use standard markdown code fences with mermaid as the language identifier:

```mermaid
flowchart TD
    A[Start] --> B[End]
```

Common Diagram Types

TypeUse CaseSyntax
flowchart TDTop-down user flows, process flowsflowchart TD
flowchart LRLeft-right horizontal flowsflowchart LR
sequenceDiagramAPI calls, service interactionssequenceDiagram
stateDiagram-v2State machines, status transitionsstateDiagram-v2
erDiagramDatabase schemas, entity relationshipserDiagram
classDiagramClass relationships, component structureclassDiagram

When to Include Diagrams

Always include a diagram when:

  • Describing a multi-step process or user flow
  • Explaining how components interact
  • Documenting state transitions
  • Showing data flow between systems
  • Illustrating API call sequences
  • Mapping entity relationships

The diagram should appear in:

  • Parent issue "High-Level Implementation" section
  • Sub-issue descriptions when flow context is needed
  • Bug reports when showing expected vs actual flow
  • Any issue where visual clarity aids understanding

Remember: A good issue can be executed by anyone who reads it.

Repository

jclfocused
jclfocused
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jclfocused/claude-agents/custom_plugins/plugins/linear-planning-workflow/skills/issue-writing
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Updated1d ago
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