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feat(skills): add one-three-one-rule communication skill (#3797)
Adds a structured 1-3-1 decision-making framework as an optional skill. Produces: one problem statement, three options with trade-offs, one recommendation with definition of done and implementation plan. Moved to optional-skills/ (niche communication framework, not broadly needed by default). Improved description with clearer trigger conditions and replaced implementation-specific example with a generic one. Based on PR #1262 by Willardgmoore. Co-authored-by: Willard Moore <willardgmoore@users.noreply.github.com>
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optional-skills/communication/DESCRIPTION.md
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optional-skills/communication/DESCRIPTION.md
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Communication and decision-making frameworks — structured response formats for proposals, trade-off analysis, and stakeholder-ready recommendations.
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optional-skills/communication/one-three-one-rule/SKILL.md
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optional-skills/communication/one-three-one-rule/SKILL.md
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---
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name: one-three-one-rule
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description: >
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Structured decision-making framework for technical proposals and trade-off analysis.
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When the user faces a choice between multiple approaches (architecture decisions,
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tool selection, refactoring strategies, migration paths), this skill produces a
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1-3-1 format: one clear problem statement, three distinct options with pros/cons,
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and one concrete recommendation with definition of done and implementation plan.
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Use when the user asks for a "1-3-1", says "give me options", or needs help
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choosing between competing approaches.
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version: 1.0.0
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author: Willard Moore
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license: MIT
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category: communication
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metadata:
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hermes:
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tags: [communication, decision-making, proposals, trade-offs]
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---
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# 1-3-1 Communication Rule
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Structured decision-making format for when a task has multiple viable approaches and the user needs a clear recommendation. Produces a concise problem framing, three options with trade-offs, and an actionable plan for the recommended path.
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## When to Use
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- The user explicitly asks for a "1-3-1" response.
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- The user says "give me options" or "what are my choices" for a technical decision.
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- A task has multiple viable approaches with meaningful trade-offs (architecture, tooling, migration strategy).
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- The user needs a proposal they can forward to a team or stakeholder.
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Do NOT use for simple questions with one obvious answer, debugging sessions, or tasks where the user has already decided on an approach.
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## Procedure
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1. **Problem** (one sentence)
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- State the core decision or desired outcome in a single concise sentence.
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- Focus on the *what*, not the *how* — no implementation details, tool names, or specific technologies.
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- Keep it tight. If you need "and", you're describing two problems.
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2. **Options** (exactly three)
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- Present three distinct, viable approaches labeled A, B, C.
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- Each option gets a brief description, pros, and cons.
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- Options should represent genuinely different strategies, not minor variations of the same approach.
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3. **Recommendation** (one option)
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- State which option you recommend and why, based on the user's context and priorities.
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- Be direct — this is your professional judgment, not a hedge.
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4. **Definition of Done**
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- List the specific success criteria for the recommended option.
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- These are concrete, verifiable outcomes — not vague aspirations.
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- If the user picks a different option, revise this section to match.
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5. **Implementation Plan**
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- Concrete steps to execute the recommended option.
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- Include specific commands, tools, or actions where applicable.
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- If the user picks a different option, revise this section to match.
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## Verification
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- Response has exactly one Problem sentence.
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- Response has exactly three Options (A, B, C) with pros and cons for each.
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- Response has a single Recommendation that picks one option with reasoning.
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- Definition of Done and Implementation Plan align with the recommended option.
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- If the user selects a different option, Recommendation, DoD, and Implementation Plan update accordingly.
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## Example
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User: "Give me a 1-3-1 for adding retry logic to our API client."
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Agent:
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**Problem:** API calls to external services fail intermittently under load and need graceful retry handling.
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**Options:**
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- **Option A: Exponential backoff with jitter in a shared utility.**
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Pros: Simple, well-understood pattern; single implementation shared across all callers.
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Cons: No circuit-breaking; callers still block during retries.
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- **Option B: Retry library (tenacity) as a decorator on each endpoint call.**
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Pros: Configurable per-endpoint; built-in support for circuit breakers and rate limits.
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Cons: Adds a dependency; decorator pattern can obscure control flow.
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- **Option C: Queue-based async retry with dead letter handling.**
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Pros: Non-blocking; failed calls are tracked and replayable; scales well.
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Cons: Significant complexity increase; requires a queue backend; overkill for low-volume services.
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**Recommendation:** Option A. The call volume doesn't justify queue infrastructure, and a shared utility with exponential backoff + jitter covers the failure mode cleanly without new dependencies.
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**Definition of Done:**
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- `api_retry()` utility handles transient HTTP errors (429, 502, 503, 504).
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- Retries up to 3 times with exponential backoff and jitter.
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- All external API calls route through the retry utility.
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- Logs each retry attempt with endpoint and attempt number.
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- Tests cover retry exhaustion, immediate success, and transient-then-success scenarios.
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**Implementation Plan:**
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1. Create `utils/api_retry.py` with configurable max retries, base delay, and retryable status codes.
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2. Add jitter using `random.uniform(0, base_delay)` to prevent thundering herd.
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3. Wrap existing API calls in `api_client.py` with the retry utility.
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4. Add unit tests mocking HTTP responses for each retry scenario.
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5. Verify under load with a simple stress test against a flaky endpoint mock.
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