atlas-quick
Quick 2-phase workflow for trivial changes - typos, colors, config updates (5-15 min)
$ 설치
git clone https://github.com/ajstack22/StackMap /tmp/StackMap && cp -r /tmp/StackMap/atlas-skills-generic/atlas-quick ~/.claude/skills/StackMap// tip: Run this command in your terminal to install the skill
name: atlas-quick description: Quick 2-phase workflow for trivial changes - typos, colors, config updates (5-15 min)
Atlas Quick Workflow
When to Use This Skill
Perfect for:
- UI text changes (typos, copy updates)
- Color/style tweaks (single value changes)
- Simple configuration updates
- Documentation fixes
- Single-line bug fixes
Time estimate: 5-15 minutes
Success criteria:
- Change deployed in < 15 minutes
- Tests pass
- No rollbacks
The 2 Phases
Phase 1: Make Change → Locate, change, verify
Phase 2: Deploy → Test + deploy via your deployment process
Phase 1: Make Change
Goal: Locate the code, make the change, verify locally.
Steps:
-
Locate the code
# Find file by name find src/ -name "*filename*" # Find file by content grep -r "text to find" src/ -
Make the change
- Update the single value/line
- Keep it simple - if it's getting complex, escalate to Iterative or Standard
-
Verify locally
- If UI change: Check visually
- If config: Verify value makes sense
- If text: Check for typos
Quick Workflow Rules:
DO:
- ✅ Make ONE focused change
- ✅ Verify change is visible/working
- ✅ Keep it under 5 minutes
DON'T:
- ❌ Change multiple unrelated things
- ❌ Add new logic
- ❌ Modify multiple files
- ❌ Skip verification
Project-Specific Considerations:
Even for quick changes, follow your project conventions:
Check for .atlas/conventions.md:
If your project has this file, review relevant sections:
- Field naming conventions
- Code style requirements
- Design system rules
- Platform-specific gotchas
Common conventions to verify:
// Example: Field naming (customize for your project)
// ✅ Use project's standard field names
user.displayName = "John"
// ❌ Don't use deprecated field names
user.username = "John" // If your project prefers displayName
// Example: Colors (customize for your project)
// ✅ Use project's color system
color: theme.colors.primary
// ❌ Don't use hard-coded colors if project has theme system
color: '#007AFF'
// Example: Typography (customize for your project)
// ✅ Use project's typography component
<Typography variant="body">Hello</Typography>
// ⚠️ Acceptable for quick change if no typography system
<Text style={{ fontFamily: 'System' }}>Hello</Text>
Examples:
Example 1: Fix typo
// Before
<Text>Wellcome to our app</Text>
// After
<Text>Welcome to our app</Text>
Example 2: Change color
// Before
backgroundColor: '#0000FF' // Bright blue
// After
backgroundColor: '#007AFF' // iOS blue
Example 3: Update timeout
// Before
const API_TIMEOUT = 30000 // 30 seconds
// After
const API_TIMEOUT = 60000 // 60 seconds
Phase 2: Deploy
Goal: Run tests and deploy via your deployment process.
Steps:
-
Update your changelog/release notes
If your project uses a changelog file (e.g.,
CHANGELOG.md,PENDING_CHANGES.md):## Title: Fix welcome message typo ### Changes Made: - Fixed typo: "Wellcome" → "Welcome" -
Run quick validation
Adjust commands based on your project:
# Type checking (if using TypeScript) npm run typecheck # OR tsc --noEmit # Linting (if configured) npm run lint # OR eslint src/ # If tests are fast enough, run them npm test -
Deploy using your project's deployment script
Replace with your actual deployment command:
# Examples (use your project's command): npm run deploy:dev # OR ./scripts/deploy.sh dev # OR make deploy-dev # OR git push origin develop
Deployment Checklist:
Pre-deployment:
- Changelog/release notes updated (if applicable)
- Type checking passes (if applicable)
- Linting passes (if applicable)
- Change verified locally
Deployment:
- Use your project's deployment script (not manual commit)
- Deploy to dev/staging environment first
- Check deployment output for errors
Post-deployment:
- No errors in deployment output
- Change visible in deployed environment
- Tests pass (if run by deployment script)
When to Skip Tests:
For truly trivial changes (typos, doc updates), you MAY skip running tests locally if:
- ✅ Change is pure text/documentation
- ✅ No code logic affected
- ✅ Deployment script will run tests anyway
However: If your deployment script runs tests, they'll catch any issues regardless.
Escalation Criteria
Escalate to Iterative workflow if:
- Change works but you want peer validation
- Making multiple related changes
- Want quality review cycle
Escalate to Standard workflow if:
- Change affects multiple files
- Tests fail (need to add new tests)
- Edge cases emerge during implementation
- Not sure if change is correct
How to Escalate:
"Escalating to [Iterative|Standard] workflow. [REASON]"
Then restart from Phase 1 of new tier.
Common Quick Workflow Tasks
1. Text Changes
Use case: Fix typos, update copy, change labels
Pattern:
# Find the text
grep -r "old text" src/
# Change it
# (Update in editor)
# Verify
# (Visual check in app)
# Deploy
[your deployment command]
Time: 5-10 minutes
2. Color Changes
Use case: Update colors, adjust styles
Pattern:
# Find color usage
grep -r "#0000FF" src/
# Change it
backgroundColor: '#007AFF'
# Verify colors follow design system
# Deploy
[your deployment command]
Time: 5-10 minutes
3. Config Updates
Use case: Change timeouts, URLs, feature flags
Pattern:
# Find config
grep -r "TIMEOUT" src/config/
# Change value
const API_TIMEOUT = 60000
# Verify value makes sense
# Deploy
[your deployment command]
Time: 5 minutes
4. Documentation Updates
Use case: Update README, comments, docs
Pattern:
# Update documentation file directly
# No tests needed for pure docs
# Deploy
[your deployment command]
Time: 5 minutes
Anti-Patterns (Don't Do This)
❌ Anti-Pattern 1: Making Multiple Changes
"Fix typo in welcome text AND update button color AND adjust padding"
Problem: No longer a quick change. Each change has different risk.
Solution: Escalate to Iterative or make separate Quick changes.
❌ Anti-Pattern 2: Adding Logic
"Change timeout from 30s to 60s AND add retry logic"
Problem: "Add retry logic" is not trivial.
Solution: Escalate to Standard workflow.
❌ Anti-Pattern 3: Modifying Multiple Files
"Update button text in 5 components"
Problem: Multiple files = higher risk, needs review.
Solution: Escalate to Standard workflow (or make 5 separate Quick changes if truly independent).
❌ Anti-Pattern 4: Skipping Verification
Make change → Deploy immediately without checking
Problem: Might deploy broken change.
Solution: Always verify locally first.
Quick Workflow Checklist
Use this checklist for every Quick workflow:
Phase 1: Make Change
- Found the file quickly (< 2 minutes)
- Change is ONE focused thing
- No logic changes
- No new files created
- Verified change locally
- Project conventions followed (check
.atlas/conventions.md)
Phase 2: Deploy
- Changelog/release notes updated (if applicable)
- Type checking passes (if ran)
- Deployed using project's deployment script
- No deployment errors
- Change visible in environment
Red Flags (Escalate if ANY are true):
- ⚠️ Took > 5 minutes to locate code
- ⚠️ Need to modify multiple files
- ⚠️ Tests failing
- ⚠️ Not sure if change is correct
- ⚠️ Need to add new logic
- ⚠️ Cross-platform implications
Example: Complete Quick Workflow
Task: "Fix typo in error message"
Phase 1: Make Change (3 minutes)
Step 1: Locate
grep -r "Opertaion faild" src/
# Found: src/services/api/apiClient.js:142
Step 2: Change
// Before (line 142)
throw new Error('Opertaion faild due to network error')
// After
throw new Error('Operation failed due to network error')
Step 3: Verify
# Quick type check (if applicable)
npm run typecheck
# ✅ Pass
Phase 2: Deploy (2 minutes)
Step 1: Update changelog (if applicable)
## Title: Fix typo in API error message
### Changes Made:
- Fixed typo: "Opertaion faild" → "Operation failed"
Step 2: Deploy
npm run deploy:dev
# Output:
# ✅ Linting: Pass
# ✅ Type checking: Pass
# ✅ Tests: Pass (15/15)
# ✅ Build: Success
# ✅ Deployed: dev.example.com
Total time: 5 minutes ✅
When NOT to Use Quick Workflow
Don't use Quick if:
- Change affects > 1 file → Use Iterative or Standard
- Need to add tests → Use Standard
- Not sure about impact → Use Standard
- Security-related → Use Standard or Full
- Cross-platform concerns → Use Standard
- Need review/validation → Use Iterative
Default rule: When in doubt, use Standard workflow instead.
Success Indicators
You've succeeded when:
- ✅ Deployed in < 15 minutes
- ✅ Tests pass (if ran)
- ✅ No rollbacks needed
- ✅ Change works as expected
- ✅ No side effects
You should have escalated if:
- ⚠️ Took > 15 minutes
- ⚠️ Found edge cases
- ⚠️ Tests failed
- ⚠️ Needed to change multiple files
- ⚠️ Uncertain about correctness
Quick Reference
Quick Workflow Commands:
# Find code
grep -r "search term" src/
find src/ -name "*filename*"
# Verify (adjust for your project)
npm run typecheck # Type checking
npm run lint # Linting
npm test # Tests
# Deploy (use your project's command)
[your deployment command]
Time Allocation:
- Phase 1: 3-10 minutes (locate + change + verify)
- Phase 2: 2-5 minutes (deploy)
- Total: 5-15 minutes
Decision:
- 1 file, trivial, no logic → Quick ✅
- 2+ files, validation needed → Iterative
- Logic changes, tests needed → Standard
Customization for Your Project
To customize this workflow for your project:
- Create
.atlas/conventions.mdwith your standards - Update deployment commands in Phase 2 to match your scripts
- Adjust validation commands to match your tooling
- Define your changelog format (if using one)
- Document platform-specific rules (if applicable)
Example .atlas/conventions.md section for Quick workflow:
## Quick Workflow Conventions
### Deployment
- Command: `./deploy.sh dev`
- Always update: `CHANGELOG.md`
- Pre-deployment: Run `npm run lint && npm test`
### Code Style
- Use ESLint config (no manual formatting)
- Field naming: camelCase for JS, snake_case for DB
- Colors: Only use values from `src/theme/colors.js`
### When to Escalate
- If touching > 1 file
- If tests fail
- If change affects API contracts
Summary
The Quick workflow is for trivial changes only. It's fast because:
- No research phase (you know where the code is)
- No planning phase (change is obvious)
- No review phase (tests cover it)
Use it often for small fixes, but escalate quickly if anything feels non-trivial.
Remember: It's better to start with Quick and escalate than to skip phases in Standard workflow.
Repository
