Dynamic problem-solving through structured sequential thoughts. Use when breaking down complex problems, planning multi-step solutions, analyzing ambiguous requirements, debugging intricate issues, exploring design alternatives, or tackling problems where the full scope is unclear. Enables thought revision, branching, and iterative refinement.
Resources
2Install
npx skillscat add huynguyen03dev/opencode-setup/sequential-thinking Install via the SkillsCat registry.
Sequential Thinking
Overview
This skill provides structured sequential thinking for complex problem-solving through a dynamic, reflective thought process. Each thought can build on, question, or revise previous insights as understanding deepens.
When to Use
- Breaking down complex problems into manageable steps
- Planning and design with room for revision
- Analysis that might need course correction
- Problems where full scope is unclear initially
- Multi-step solutions requiring maintained context
- Filtering irrelevant information from complex scenarios
- Debugging intricate issues requiring systematic exploration
Script Location
The script is located at: ~/.config/opencode/skills/sequential-thinking/scripts/sequential-thinking.ts
Use $SKILL_DIR or the full path when invoking from any directory.
Core Workflow
1. Initialize Thinking
Start a thinking sequence by estimating total thoughts needed:
bun ~/.config/opencode/skills/sequential-thinking/scripts/sequential-thinking.ts sequentialthinking \
--thought "Initial analysis of the problem..." \
--thought-number 1 \
--total-thoughts 5 \
--next-thought-needed true2. Continue Sequence
Build on previous thoughts, adjusting estimates as needed:
bun ~/.config/opencode/skills/sequential-thinking/scripts/sequential-thinking.ts sequentialthinking \
--thought "Building on insight from step 1..." \
--thought-number 2 \
--total-thoughts 5 \
--next-thought-needed true3. Revise Previous Thinking
When reconsidering earlier conclusions:
bun ~/.config/opencode/skills/sequential-thinking/scripts/sequential-thinking.ts sequentialthinking \
--thought "Reconsidering step 2, I realize..." \
--thought-number 4 \
--total-thoughts 6 \
--is-revision true \
--revises-thought 2 \
--next-thought-needed true4. Branch Exploration
Explore alternative approaches:
bun ~/.config/opencode/skills/sequential-thinking/scripts/sequential-thinking.ts sequentialthinking \
--thought "Alternative approach from step 3..." \
--thought-number 5 \
--total-thoughts 7 \
--branch-from-thought 3 \
--branch-id "alternative-approach" \
--next-thought-needed true5. Complete Thinking
Conclude when solution is verified:
bun ~/.config/opencode/skills/sequential-thinking/scripts/sequential-thinking.ts sequentialthinking \
--thought "Final verified conclusion..." \
--thought-number 6 \
--total-thoughts 6 \
--next-thought-needed falseKey Features
- Adjustable estimates: Modify
totalThoughtsup/down as understanding evolves - Thought revision: Mark thoughts as revisions with
--is-revisionand--revises-thought - Branching: Explore alternatives with
--branch-from-thoughtand--branch-id - Non-linear thinking: Branch or backtrack as needed
- Hypothesis verification: Generate and verify solution hypotheses iteratively
Parameters Reference
| Parameter | Required | Description |
|---|---|---|
--thought |
Yes | Current thinking step content |
--thought-number |
Yes | Current position in sequence (1-based) |
--total-thoughts |
Yes | Estimated total thoughts (adjustable) |
--next-thought-needed |
Yes | true to continue, false to conclude |
--is-revision |
No | true if revising previous thinking |
--revises-thought |
No | Which thought number being revised |
--branch-from-thought |
No | Branching point thought number |
--branch-id |
No | Identifier for the branch |
--needs-more-thoughts |
No | Signal more thoughts needed |
Output Formats
Control output with --output flag:
text(default): Human-readable textjson: Structured JSONmarkdown: Markdown formattedraw: Raw response data
Resources
scripts/
sequential-thinking.ts- MCP server wrapper for sequential thinking (requires Bun runtime)
references/
thinking-patterns.md- Common thinking patterns and examples for various problem types