utility-pm-skill-iterate
について
このスキルは、フィードバックや検証レポートから得られた対象を絞った変更を適用することで、既存のpm-skillsを反復的に改善します。変更を書き込む前にファイルごとに修正内容をプレビューし、適切なバージョン番号の更新を提案します。フィードバックを受け取った後や規約の更新後にスキルを改良する際にご利用ください。
クイックインストール
Claude Code
推奨npx skills add product-on-purpose/pm-skills -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skillsgit clone https://github.com/product-on-purpose/pm-skills.git ~/.claude/skills/utility-pm-skill-iterateこのコマンドをClaude Codeにコピー&ペーストしてスキルをインストールします
ドキュメント
PM Skill Iterate
This skill improves an existing pm-skills skill by applying targeted changes based on input you provide. It reads the current skill files, proposes changes as before/after previews grouped by file, and writes them on your confirmation. After applying changes, it suggests a version bump class and offers to update HISTORY.md.
The iterator accepts any of these as input:
- A validation report from
/pm-skill-validate - Direct feedback ("the template is missing section X")
- A convention change ("all skills now need a Limitations section")
- A general improvement request ("make the example more realistic")
When to Use
- After running
/pm-skill-validateand getting a report with findings - When you have specific feedback on a skill and want to apply it
- When a repo convention changes and a skill needs to conform
- When a skill's example, template, or instructions need improvement
- When iterating on a skill before a release
When NOT to Use
- To create a new skill from scratch -> use
/pm-skill-builder - To audit a skill before making changes -> use
/pm-skill-validatefirst - To make bulk convention changes across many skills -> run
/pm-skill-validate --allfirst to triage, then iterate one skill at a time
Instructions
When asked to iterate on a skill, follow these steps:
Step 1: Identify the Target Skill
Accept the skill name in any form:
- Directory name:
deliver-prd - Full path:
skills/deliver-prd/SKILL.md - Slash command:
/prd
Resolve to the canonical directory path: skills/{name}/.
If the skill directory does not exist, stop and report: "Skill directory
skills/{name}/ does not exist. Use /pm-skill-builder to create it."
Step 2: Read Current Skill Files
Read all files in the skill directory:
| File | Required | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
SKILL.md | yes | Frontmatter + instructions (the primary edit target) |
references/TEMPLATE.md | yes | Output template |
references/EXAMPLE.md | yes | Worked example |
HISTORY.md | no | Version history (needed for Step 7) |
Record the exact content of each file at this point. You will compare against this content before writing in Step 5 (stale-preview guard).
If reading files is not possible (MCP/embedded environment), ask the user to paste the relevant file contents before proceeding (see Degraded Mode).
Step 3: Normalize Input into Intended Changes
Regardless of input type, extract a structured list of intended changes before generating any edits. This normalization step is what makes the unified flow work consistently across all input types.
If the input is a validation report (from /pm-skill-validate):
- Check for
Report schema: v1in the header. If absent or a different schema version, warn: "This report uses an unrecognized schema. I'll do my best but may miss structured fields." - Parse the
## Recommendationssection. - Split each recommendation line on
|to extract:- Position 1: severity (FAIL, WARN, INFO)
- Position 2: check ID
- After
Target:: file path - After
Action:(next line): what to change
- Build the intended changes list from these fields.
If the input is free text (feedback, convention change, improvement request):
- Read the input and identify what needs to change.
- Map each change to a specific target file and section.
- If the input is vague, ask ONE clarifying question before proceeding.
Present the normalized list for user confirmation:
Intended changes:
1. Target: skills/{name}/SKILL.md -> {section}
Change: {what will change}
Source: {validation report check ID | user feedback | convention change}
2. Target: skills/{name}/references/EXAMPLE.md -> {section}
Change: {what will change}
Source: {source}
If the user wants to modify the list (add, remove, or change items), adjust and re-present before proceeding.
Step 4: Preview Proposed Changes
For each intended change, generate the proposed edit and present it as a before/after block grouped by file:
### skills/{name}/SKILL.md
**{Section name} -- before:**
> {exact current content of the section being changed}
**{Section name} -- after:**
> {proposed new content for this section}
### skills/{name}/references/EXAMPLE.md
**{Section name} -- before:**
> {exact current content}
**{Section name} -- after:**
> {proposed new content}
Preview rules:
- Group all changes by file. Show each file once, with all its changes.
- Show enough surrounding context for the user to understand the change.
- For small edits (a few lines), show the full section before and after.
- For large edits (rewriting most of a section), show the section header and the first/last few lines of before, then the full after.
- Do NOT show files that are not being changed.
Ask: "Apply these changes? [yes / no]"
If the user says no, ask what to adjust and return to Step 3 or Step 4.
Step 5: Apply Changes (with Stale-Preview Guard)
Before writing any file, re-read each target file and compare its content to what you recorded in Step 2.
If any target file has changed since Step 2:
- Do NOT write any files.
- Report: "File
{path}has changed since the preview was generated. Regenerating preview with current content." - Return to Step 2 with the same intended changes list.
If all target files match:
- Write the changes to each target file.
- Update the
updatedfield in SKILL.md frontmatter to today's date. (Theupdatedfield tracks when the file was last modified, regardless of whether a version bump is accepted.) - Byte-0 preservation: verify each rewritten file still has
---at byte 0 of the file (no preceding content). If the previous content violated byte-0 placement (e.g., HTML attribution comment on line 1), surface this defensively before applying other changes and offer to fix the placement as part of the same write. Reference:library/skill-output-samples/SAMPLE_CREATION.mdSection 5. - Report what was written: list each file and a one-line summary of what changed.
Step 6: Suggest Version Bump
After changes are applied, classify the overall change and suggest a version bump class. Do NOT auto-write the version number.
Classification rules (from docs/internal/skill-versioning.md):
| Change type | Bump class | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Wording clarified, examples improved, typos fixed | patch | Reworded checklist item, better example scenario, description expanded |
| New optional capability or section added | minor | New optional output section, handles more scenarios, new quality check |
| Required contract changed, interaction pattern breaks | major | Command renamed, required section removed, "done" definition narrowed |
Tie-breaker: If a user must do something new to stay compliant with the skill's required contract, classify as major. If the new behavior is additive or optional, classify as minor. If the required behavior is unchanged and only clarified, classify as patch.
Present the suggestion:
Suggested bump: {class} ({reason}).
Current version: {current}.
Bump to {suggested}? [yes / override / skip]
- yes: Write the new version to SKILL.md frontmatter.
- override: Ask for the desired version, validate it's valid SemVer and higher than current, then write it.
- skip: Leave the version unchanged. The user may bump it later during release prep.
Step 7: Offer HISTORY.md Update
After the version decision, produce a change summary and handle HISTORY.md based on the current state:
If HISTORY.md exists and version was bumped:
- Read HISTORY.md and validate its format:
- Has a summary table with
| Version | Date | Release | ...header - Versions are newest-first in the table
- Each table version has a corresponding
## X.Y.Zsection below
- Has a summary table with
- If format is valid: offer to append.
"Would you like me to add this version to HISTORY.md? [yes / no]"
On yes: add a new row to the summary table (newest-first) and a new
## X.Y.Zsection with the change summary. - If format is invalid: warn and show the proposed content without writing. "HISTORY.md doesn't follow the expected format. Here's what I would add -- you can paste it manually:" Then show the proposed table row and version section.
If HISTORY.md does not exist and this is the skill's second version:
Offer to create it. "This is the second version of this skill. Would you
like me to create HISTORY.md with entries for both versions? [yes / no]"
On yes: create HISTORY.md with the format from docs/internal/skill-versioning.md,
including entries for both the original version (from release history or
effort brief) and the new version.
If HISTORY.md does not exist and version was not bumped: No offer. HISTORY.md is premature until the skill has shipped a second version.
If HISTORY.md exists but version was not bumped (skip): No offer. The change summary is available in the conversation for the user to use at their discretion.
Step 8: Report Summary
Present a final summary:
## Iteration Complete: {skill-name}
**Files changed:**
- skills/{name}/SKILL.md -- {summary}
- skills/{name}/references/EXAMPLE.md -- {summary}
**Version:** {current} -> {new} ({class}) | or: unchanged (skipped)
**HISTORY.md:** updated | created | skipped | not applicable
**Next steps:**
- Run `/pm-skill-validate {name}` to verify the changes pass
- Run local CI: `bash scripts/lint-skills-frontmatter.sh`
- If satisfied, commit the changes
Degraded Mode
If you cannot read skill files directly (e.g., running via MCP or in an embedded environment without file system access):
- Validation-report-driven iteration is preferred in this mode. The report carries the context (check IDs, target paths, actions).
- For free-text iteration, ask the user to paste the content of each relevant file before proposing changes.
- The stale-preview guard (Step 5) cannot run -- note in the summary: "Applied without stale-preview check (file system not available)."
- HISTORY.md operations require the user to paste the current file content or confirm it does not exist.
Output Contract
The iterator MUST:
- Normalize input into a structured intended-changes list before editing
- Present all proposed changes as before/after previews grouped by file
- Require explicit user confirmation before writing any file
- Re-read target files before writing to guard against stale previews
- Update the
updatedfrontmatter field on every apply - Suggest a version bump class without auto-writing the version number
- Handle HISTORY.md according to the rules in Step 7
The iterator MUST NOT:
- Write files without showing a preview first
- Write files without user confirmation
- Auto-increment the version number without explicit confirmation
- Create HISTORY.md for a skill still on its first version
- Append to HISTORY.md without validating its format first
Quality Checklist
Before completing the iteration, verify:
- Input was normalized into an intended-changes list before editing
- All proposed changes were shown as before/after previews
- User confirmed before any files were written
- Stale-preview guard ran before writing (or noted as unavailable)
-
updateddate was set to today in SKILL.md frontmatter - Version bump class was suggested with correct reasoning
- Version was only written after explicit user confirmation
- HISTORY.md was handled correctly per Step 7 rules
- Final summary was presented with next steps
Examples
See references/EXAMPLE.md for a completed iteration demonstrating
a validation-report-driven improvement to a real shipped skill.
GitHub リポジトリ
関連スキル
content-collections
メタこのスキルは、Content Collections(Markdown/MDXファイルを型安全なデータコレクションに変換するTypeScriptファーストのツール)の本番環境でテストされた設定を提供します。Zodバリデーションによる型安全性を実現し、ブログ、ドキュメントサイト、コンテンツ重視のVite + Reactアプリケーション構築時にご利用ください。Viteプラグインの設定、MDXコンパイルから、デプロイ最適化、スキーマバリデーションまで、すべてを網羅しています。
polymarket
メタこのスキルは、開発者がPolymarket予測市場プラットフォームを活用したアプリケーション構築を可能にします。API統合による取引や市場データの取得に加え、WebSocketを介したリアルタイムデータストリーミングにより、ライブ取引や市場活動を監視できます。取引戦略の実装や、ライブ市場更新を処理するツールの作成にご利用ください。
creating-opencode-plugins
メタこのスキルは、開発者がコマンド、ファイル、LSP操作など25種類以上のイベントタイプにフックするOpenCodeプラグインを作成することを支援します。JavaScript/TypeScriptモジュール向けに、プラグイン構造、イベントAPI仕様、および実装パターンを提供します。カスタムイベント駆動ロジックでOpenCode AIアシスタントのライフサイクルをインターセプト、監視、または拡張する必要がある場合にご利用ください。
sglang
メタSGLangは、高性能なLLMサービングフレームワークであり、RadixAttentionプレフィックスキャッシュを活用したJSON、正規表現、エージェントワークフロー向けの高速で構造化された生成を特長とします。特にプレフィックスが繰り返されるタスクにおいて、大幅に高速な推論を実現し、複雑な構造化出力やマルチターン対話に最適です。制約付きデコードが必要な場合や、広範なプレフィックス共有を伴うアプリケーションを構築する場合は、vLLMなどの代替案ではなくSGLangを選択してください。
