home / skills / bbeierle12 / skill-mcp-claude / subagent-driven-development
This skill coordinates task-based development by dispatching fresh subagents and reviewing progress between tasks to ensure rapid, controlled delivery.
npx playbooks add skill bbeierle12/skill-mcp-claude --skill subagent-driven-developmentReview the files below or copy the command above to add this skill to your agents.
---
name: subagent-driven-development
description: Use when executing implementation plans. Dispatches independent subagents for individual tasks with code review checkpoints between iterations for rapid, controlled development.
---
# Subagent-Driven Development
## Core Principle
**Fresh context per task. Review between tasks.**
Each task gets a clean subagent with no accumulated confusion. You review between tasks.
## How It Works
1. Load the implementation plan
2. For each task:
- Dispatch fresh subagent
- Subagent implements ONLY that task
- Review the changes
- Approve or request fixes
- Move to next task
## Benefits
- **Clean Context**: Each subagent starts fresh
- **Focused Work**: One task at a time
- **Review Points**: Catch issues early
- **Controlled Progress**: You stay in charge
## Execution Flow
### Step 1: Load the Plan
```markdown
Loading plan from: docs/plans/YYYY-MM-DD-feature-name.md
Tasks identified:
1. [ ] Task 1: Description
2. [ ] Task 2: Description
3. [ ] Task 3: Description
Starting with Task 1...
```
### Step 2: Dispatch Subagent
For each task, create a focused prompt:
```markdown
## Task: [Task Name]
### Context
- Project: [brief description]
- Current branch: [branch name]
- Dependencies: [relevant info]
### Instructions
[Exact instructions from plan]
### Files to Modify
- `path/to/file.ts`
### Test to Write First
[Test code from plan]
### Implementation
[Implementation code from plan]
### Success Criteria
- [ ] Test passes
- [ ] No other tests broken
- [ ] Code follows project style
```
### Step 3: Review Changes
After subagent completes:
```markdown
## Task 1 Complete
### Changes Made:
- Modified: `path/to/file.ts` (+25/-3)
- Added: `path/to/file.test.ts` (+40)
### Test Results:
✅ All tests passing (47 total)
### Review Checklist:
- [ ] Test covers the requirement
- [ ] Implementation is correct
- [ ] No unnecessary changes
- [ ] Code style matches project
**Approve and continue to Task 2?**
```
### Step 4: Handle Issues
If review finds problems:
```markdown
## Issues Found in Task 1
1. Test doesn't cover edge case X
2. Missing error handling for Y
**Options:**
A) Request fixes from subagent
B) Fix manually
C) Skip and note for later
Which approach?
```
## Subagent Guidelines
### What Subagents Should Do
- Follow the plan exactly
- Write tests first
- Make minimal changes
- Report what was done
### What Subagents Should NOT Do
- Make "improvements" outside scope
- Skip tests
- Refactor unrelated code
- Change the plan
## Progress Tracking
Maintain task status:
```markdown
## Progress: Feature Name
- [x] Task 1: Setup database schema ✅
- [x] Task 2: Create API endpoint ✅
- [ ] Task 3: Add validation (IN PROGRESS)
- [ ] Task 4: Write integration tests
- [ ] Task 5: Update documentation
Current: Task 3 of 5
```
## Checkpoints
### After Each Task
- Run all tests
- Review diff
- Commit if approved
### After All Tasks
- Run integration tests
- Manual verification
- Final review
## Rollback
If things go wrong:
```bash
# Revert last task
git revert HEAD
# Or reset to checkpoint
git reset --hard <commit-before-task>
```
## Communication Pattern
### Starting
"I'm using subagent-driven-development to implement [feature]. I'll dispatch a fresh subagent for each task and review between them."
### Between Tasks
"Task [N] complete. Changes: [summary]. Ready to review before Task [N+1]?"
### Completing
"All [N] tasks complete. Running final verification..."
This skill runs implementation plans by dispatching fresh subagents for each task and inserting review checkpoints between iterations. It enforces a write-tests-first, minimal-change workflow so you make steady, auditable progress. Use it to break features into isolated tasks with automated and manual verification at every step.
Load an implementation plan and iterate tasks. For each task a fresh subagent is dispatched with a focused prompt, tests are written first, the subagent implements only that task, then you review the diff and test results. Approve, request fixes, or handle issues before moving to the next task, keeping commits and checkpoints clean.
How do I handle a subagent that makes unrelated changes?
Reject the changes during review and request a fix specifying the minimal files and behavior to change; if necessary, revert and assign the task again.
When should I manually fix issues versus requesting subagent fixes?
Request fixes when they are scoped and simple; do manual fixes when the change is urgent or the issue crosses task boundaries and would be faster resolved by a human.