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swain-help

Contextual help and onboarding for the swain skill ecosystem. Use when users ask about swain — what skills exist, how to use them, what artifacts are available, how workflows connect, or when they need a quick reference. Also invoked after swain-init to orient new users. Triggers on: 'how do I...', 'what is...', 'help', 'what can swain do', 'show me the commands', 'I'm confused', 'where do I start', any question about swain skills, artifacts, or workflows, and after project onboarding completes.

personAuthor: jakexiaohubgithub
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swain-help

Contextual help for the swain skill ecosystem.

Mode detection

Determine the mode from context:

| Signal | Mode | |--------|------| | Invoked from swain-init Phase 4, or user says "just set up swain" / "what now after init" | Onboarding | | User asks a specific question ("how do I...", "what is...", "when should I...") | Question | | User asks for a reference, cheat sheet, commands, or overview | Reference |

Onboarding mode

Present a concise orientation — help the user understand what they just installed without overwhelming them. Adapt tone to context (first-time dev vs experienced engineer).

Present this:

Welcome to swain. Here's how it works:

The big picture: Swain manages your project's documentation artifacts (specs, stories, ADRs, etc.) and tracks implementation work — so nothing falls through the cracks between sessions.

Three things to know:

  1. /swain is your entry point. It routes to the right sub-skill automatically. You can also call skills directly (/swain-design, /swain-do, etc.).

  2. Design before you build. When you want to implement something, start with /swain to create a spec or story. Swain enforces a "plan before code" workflow — it creates tracked tasks before implementation begins.

  3. Health checks are automatic. /swain-doctor runs at session start to ensure routing rules are in place and .tickets/ is healthy. You don't need to think about it.

Common starting points:

  • "I want to plan a new feature" → creates an Epic or Story
  • "Write a spec for X" → creates an Agent Spec
  • "What should I work on next?" → checks your task backlog
  • "File a bug" → creates a Bug artifact
  • "Let's release" → version bump + changelog

Need more? Ask me anything about swain, or say /swain help reference for a full cheat sheet.

Then stop. Let the user ask follow-up questions — don't dump everything at once.

Question mode

Answer the user's specific question using your knowledge of swain. If you need details beyond what's in this skill, read the relevant reference:

| Topic | Where to look | |-------|---------------| | Artifact types, phases, relationships | skills/swain-help/references/quick-ref.md — Artifacts section | | Commands and invocations | skills/swain-help/references/quick-ref.md — Commands section | | Step-by-step walkthroughs | skills/swain-help/references/workflows.md | | Artifact definitions and templates | skills/swain-design/references/<type>-definition.md | | tk (ticket) CLI reference | skills/swain-do/references/tk-cheatsheet.md | | Troubleshooting | skills/swain-design/references/troubleshooting.md |

Guidelines for answering:

  • Be concise. Answer the question, don't dump the entire reference.
  • Use examples when they clarify — "You'd say /swain create a spec for auth token rotation".
  • Hand off when appropriate. If the user's question is really a request to do something (e.g., "how do I create a spec?" followed by "ok do it"), invoke the relevant skill directly via the Skill tool. Explain what you're doing: "I'll hand this off to swain-design."
  • Admit gaps. If something isn't covered, say so rather than inventing swain features.
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Reference mode

When the user wants an overview or cheat sheet, read skills/swain-help/references/quick-ref.md and present the relevant section. If they want "everything", present the full quick reference but note it's dense.

For workflow walkthroughs, read skills/swain-help/references/workflows.md.