ubiquitous-language
Ubiquitous Language
Create or update a DDD-style glossary of domain terms in UBIQUITOUS_LANGUAGE.md.
Inspired by Matt Pocock's deprecated ubiquitous-language skill, MIT License, Copyright 2026 Matt Pocock:
https://github.com/mattpocock/skills/blob/main/skills/deprecated/ubiquitous-language/SKILL.md
Process
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Generate clear, PM-friendly release notes and session summaries from git commits, feature work, or current development changes.
19agents-md
Generate or update AGENTS.md for a repository or VS Code workspace, create CLAUDE.md and GEMINI.md shims, build a project matrix with stable project codes, and reference CONTEXT.md / ADRs as required domain context.
13feature-prompt
Use when the user wants to turn a feature idea, change request, or rough requirement into a precise feature-development prompt for one or more codebase projects.
12feature-discovery
Use when the user asks to investigate, audit, trace, or explain how a feature, issue, module, workflow, API, config, or behavior works across one or more codebase projects.
11commit-push-pr
Ship one iteration of work on a GitHub issue as a pull request — stage and commit with a structured message, push the current branch, and open a PR that uses `Closes #N` to auto-close the linked issue on merge. If no GitHub issue can be located, the skill creates one inline before committing. The commit subject prefix is chosen by the issue's state label (`HITL:` for `ready-for-human`, `AKF:` for `ready-for-agent`). Use when the user says "commit, push, and open a PR", "ship this as a PR", "PR this issue", or otherwise wants to wrap up issue work as a reviewable PR rather than a direct close.
5commit-push-close
Ship one iteration of work on a GitHub issue — stage and commit with a structured message, push to the current branch, then close the linked GitHub issue with a comment that explains how to test the change. If no GitHub issue can be located, the skill creates one inline before committing. The commit subject prefix is chosen by the issue's state label (`HITL:` for `ready-for-human`, `AKF:` for `ready-for-agent`). Use when the user says "commit, push, and close", "ship this issue", "I'm done with this issue", or otherwise wants to wrap up work on a GitHub issue in one step.
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