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use-subagents

use-subagentsSafety 95Repository

This skill should be used when coordinating agents, delegating tasks to specialists, or when dispatch agents, which agent, or multi-agent are mentioned.

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SKILL.md

Subagent Coordination

Orchestrate outfitter subagents by matching tasks to the right agent + skill combinations.

Orchestration Planning

For complex multi-agent tasks, start with the Plan subagent to research and design the orchestration strategy before execution.

Complex task arrives
    │
    ├─► Plan subagent (research stage)
    │   └─► Explore codebase, gather context
    │   └─► Identify which agents and skills needed
    │   └─► Design execution sequence (sequential, parallel, or hybrid)
    │   └─► Return orchestration plan
    │
    └─► Execute plan (dispatch agents per plan)

Plan subagent benefits:

  • Runs in isolated context — doesn't consume main conversation tokens
  • Can read many files without bloating orchestrator context
  • Returns concise plan for execution

When to use Plan subagent:

  • Task touches multiple domains (auth + performance + testing)
  • Unknown codebase area — needs exploration first
  • Sequence of agents matters (dependencies between steps)
  • High-stakes changes requiring careful coordination

Context Management

For long-running orchestration, load the context-management skill. It teaches:

  • Using Tasks as survivable state (persists across compaction)
  • Delegating to subagents to preserve main context
  • Pre-compaction checklists to capture progress
  • Cross-session patterns for multi-day work

Key principle: Main conversation context is precious. Delegate exploration and research to subagents — only their summaries return, keeping main context lean.

Roles and Agents

Coordination uses roles (what function is needed) mapped to agents (who fulfills it). This allows substitution when better-suited agents are available.

Baselayer Agents

RoleAgentPurpose
codingengineerBuild, implement, fix, refactor
reviewingreviewerEvaluate code, PRs, architecture, security
researchanalystInvestigate, research, explore
debuggingdebuggerDiagnose issues, trace problems
testingtesterValidate, prove, verify behavior
challengingskepticChallenge complexity, question assumptions
specialistspecialistDomain expertise (CI/CD, design, accessibility, etc.)
patternsanalystExtract reusable patterns from work

Other Available Agents

Additional agents may be available in your environment (user-defined, plugin-provided, or built-in). When dispatching:

  1. Check available agents for best fit to the role
  2. Prefer specialized agents over generalists when they match the task
  3. Fall back to outfitter agents when no better option exists

Examples of role substitution:

  • codingsenior-engineer, developer, engineer
  • reviewingsecurity-auditor, code-reviewer, reviewer
  • researchresearch-engineer, docs-librarian, analyst
  • specialistcicd-expert, design-agent, accessibility-auditor, bun-expert

Task Routing

Route by role, then select the best available agent for that role:

User request arrives
    │
    ├─► "build/implement/fix/refactor" ──► coding role
    │
    ├─► "review/critique/audit" ──► reviewing role
    │
    ├─► "investigate/research/explore" ──► research role
    │
    ├─► "debug/diagnose/trace" ──► debugging role
    │
    ├─► "test/validate/prove" ──► testing role
    │
    ├─► "simplify/challenge/is this overkill" ──► challenging role
    │
    ├─► "deploy/configure/CI/design/a11y" ──► specialist role
    │
    └─► "capture this workflow/make reusable" ──► patterns role

Workflow Patterns

Sequential Handoff

One agent completes, passes to next:

research (investigate) → coding (implement) → reviewing (verify) → testing (validate)

Use when: Clear stages, each requires different expertise.

Parallel Execution

Multiple agents work simultaneously using run_in_background: true:

┌─► reviewing (code quality)
│
task ──┼─► research (impact analysis)
│
└─► testing (regression tests)

Use when: Independent concerns, time-sensitive, comprehensive coverage needed.

Challenge Loop

Build → challenge → refine:

coding (propose) ←→ challenging (evaluate) → coding (refine)

Use when: Complex architecture, preventing over-engineering, high-stakes decisions.

Investigation Chain

Narrow down, then fix:

research (scope) → debugging (root cause) → coding (fix) → testing (verify)

Use when: Bug reports, production issues, unclear symptoms.

Role + Skill Combinations

Coding Role

TaskSkills
New featuresoftware-craft, tdd-fieldguide
Bug fixdebugging → software-craft
Refactorsoftware-craft + sanity-check
API endpointhono-fieldguide, software-craft
React componentreact-fieldguide, software-craft
AI featuresoftware-craft

Reviewing Role

TaskSkills
PR reviewcode-review
Architecture reviewsystems-design
Performance auditperformance
Security auditsecurity
Pre-merge checkcode-review + prove-it-works

Research Role

TaskSkills
Codebase explorationcodebase-analysis
Research questionresearch
Unclear requirementspathfinding
Status reportstatus, report-findings

Testing Role

TaskSkills
Feature validationprove-it-works
TDD implementationtdd-fieldguide
Integration testingprove-it-works

Advanced Execution Patterns

Background Execution

Run agents asynchronously for parallel work:

{
  "description": "Security review",
  "prompt": "Review auth module for vulnerabilities",
  "subagent_type": "reviewer",
  "run_in_background": true
}

Retrieve results with TaskOutput:

{
  "task_id": "agent-abc123",
  "block": true
}

Chaining Subagents

Sequence agents for complex workflows — each agent's output informs the next:

research agent → "Found 3 auth patterns in use"
    ↓
coding agent → "Implementing refresh token flow using pattern A"
    ↓
reviewing agent → "Verified implementation, found 1 issue"
    ↓
coding agent → "Fixed issue, ready for merge"

Pass context explicitly between agents via prompt.

Resumable Sessions

Continue long-running work across invocations:

{
  "description": "Continue security analysis",
  "prompt": "Now examine session management",
  "subagent_type": "reviewer",
  "resume": "agent-abc123"
}

Agent preserves full context from previous execution.

Use cases:

  • Multi-stage research spanning topics
  • Iterative refinement without re-explaining context
  • Long debugging sessions with incremental discoveries

Model Selection

Override model for specific needs:

{
  "subagent_type": "analyst",
  "model": "haiku"  // Fast, cheap for exploration
}
  • haiku: Fast exploration, simple queries
  • sonnet: Balanced reasoning (default)
  • opus: Complex analysis, nuanced judgment

Coordination Rules

  1. Single owner: One role owns each task stage
  2. Clear handoffs: Explicit deliverables between agents
  3. Skill loading: Agent loads only needed skills
  4. User prefs first: Check CLAUDE.md before applying defaults
  5. Minimal agents: Don't parallelize what can be sequential

Decision Framework

When agents face implementation choices:

  1. Favor existing patterns — Match what's already in the codebase
  2. Prefer simplicity — Cleverness is a liability; simple is maintainable
  3. Optimize for maintainability — Next developer (or agent) must understand it
  4. Consider backward compatibility — Breaking changes require explicit approval
  5. Document trade-offs — When choosing between options, record why

These principles apply across all roles. Agents should surface decisions to the orchestrator when trade-offs are significant.

Communication Style

Orchestrators and agents should:

  • Report progress at each major step (don't go silent)
  • Flag blockers immediately — don't spin on unsolvable problems
  • Provide clear summaries of delegated work (what was done, what remains)
  • Include file paths and line numbers when referencing code

Progress format:

░░░░░░░░░░ [1/5] research: Exploring auth patterns
▓▓▓▓░░░░░░ [2/5] coding: Implementing refresh token flow

When to Escalate

  • Blocked: Agent can't proceed → route to research role
  • Conflicting findings: Multiple agents disagree → surface to user
  • Scope creep: Task expands beyond role's domain → re-route
  • Missing context: Not enough info → research role with pathfinding skill

Git Operations Policy

CRITICAL: Subagents MUST NOT perform git operations (commit, push, branch creation) when running in parallel.

Only the orchestrator handles git state. Subagents write code to the filesystem and report completion.

Anti-Patterns

  • Running all agents on every task (wasteful)
  • Skipping reviewing role for "small changes" (risk)
  • Coding role debugging without debugging skills (inefficient)
  • Parallel agents with dependencies (race conditions)
  • Not challenging complex proposals (over-engineering)
  • Parallel agents with git permissions (stack corruption)

Quick Reference

"I need to build X" → coding role + TDD skills

"Review this PR" → reviewing role + code-review

"Why is this broken?" → debugging role + debugging

"Is this approach overkill?" → challenging role + sanity-check

"Prove this works" → testing role + prove-it-works

"What's the codebase doing?" → research role + codebase-analysis

"Deploy to production" → specialist role + domain skills

"Make this workflow reusable" → patterns role + codify

Install

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Requires askill CLI v1.0+

AI Quality Score

89/100Analyzed 2/23/2026

High-quality, comprehensive skill document covering subagent coordination with well-structured sections, clear tables, workflow patterns, and code examples. Excellent actionability with role-to-agent mapping and execution patterns. Includes critical safety guidance (git operations policy) and anti-patterns. Slight deduction for lacking explicit standalone "when to use" section despite trigger in description. Reusable and well-tagged for discoverability.

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Metadata

Licenseunknown
Version-
Updatedlast week
Publisheroutfitter-dev

Tags

apici-cdgithub-actionsllmpromptingsecuritytesting