nyldn

octopus-quick

Quick execution for ad-hoc tasks without workflow overhead. Use when: Use this skill when user says "quick fix", "ad-hoc task", or explicitly. requests fast execution without full workflow overhead.

nyldn 3,457 310 Updated 3mo ago
GitHub

Install

npx skillscat add nyldn/claude-octopus/octopus-quick

Install via the SkillsCat registry.

SKILL.md

Quick Mode - Lightweight Task Execution ⚡

Fast-track execution for small tasks that don't need full Double Diamond workflow overhead.

When to Use Quick Mode

✅ Use Quick Mode For:

Bug Fixes:

  • One-file bug fixes with known solution
  • Typo corrections
  • Logic error fixes
  • Import/export corrections

Configuration Changes:

  • Update environment variables
  • Modify config files
  • Adjust settings
  • Update dependencies

Small Refactorings:

  • Rename variables/functions
  • Extract helper functions
  • Simplify logic in single file
  • Code cleanup

Documentation:

  • Fix typos in README
  • Update comments
  • Add/update docstrings
  • Clarify documentation

Dependency Management:

  • Update package versions
  • Add new dependency
  • Remove unused dependency

❌ Don't Use Quick Mode For:

Complex Work:

  • New features
  • Architecture changes
  • Multi-file refactorings
  • Security-sensitive changes
  • Performance optimizations requiring research
  • Database schema changes
  • API contract changes

Use full workflows for complex work to ensure quality.


Execution Flow

Quick mode follows a streamlined process:

User Request → Direct Implementation → Atomic Commit → Summary

What Quick Mode SKIPS:

  • ❌ Multi-AI research (probe/discover)
  • ❌ Requirements planning (grasp/define)
  • ❌ Multi-AI validation (ink/deliver)
  • ❌ Plan-checker verification

What Quick Mode KEEPS:

  • ✅ State tracking (records in state.json)
  • ✅ Atomic commits (git commit with description)
  • ✅ Summary generation (stored in .claude-octopus/quick/)
  • ✅ Change documentation

Usage

Via Command

/octo:quick "add dark mode toggle to settings"

Via Skill Invocation

Use skill: octopus-quick
Task: "fix typo in README.md line 42"

Examples

/octo:quick "update Next.js to v15"
/octo:quick "fix the broken import in auth.ts"
/octo:quick "add error handling to login function"
/octo:quick "remove console.log statements"

Implementation

Step 1: Understand the Task

Quickly assess:

  • What file(s) need to change?
  • What's the specific change?
  • Any dependencies or side effects?

Step 2: Make the Change

Implement directly using appropriate tools:

  • Edit - For modifying existing files
  • Write - For creating new files (rare in quick mode)
  • Bash - For file operations, dependency updates

Step 3: Create Atomic Commit

Always create a descriptive commit:

# Stage changes
git add [changed-files]

# Create commit with clear message
git commit -m "quick: [brief description]

[Detailed explanation if needed]

Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>"

Commit message format:

  • Prefix with quick: to indicate quick mode
  • Brief description in present tense
  • Optional detailed explanation
  • Co-authored tag

Step 4: Record in State

# Update state with quick task execution
"${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/scripts/state-manager.sh" write_decision \
  "quick" \
  "$(git log -1 --pretty=%s)" \
  "Ad-hoc task executed in quick mode"

# Update metrics
"${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT}/scripts/state-manager.sh" update_metrics \
  "execution_time" \
  "1"  # Estimated in minutes

Step 5: Generate Summary

# Create quick task summary
mkdir -p .claude-octopus/quick

summary_file=".claude-octopus/quick/$(date +%Y%m%d-%H%M%S)-summary.md"

cat > "$summary_file" <<EOF
# Quick Task: $(git log -1 --pretty=%s)

## Task Description
$TASK_DESCRIPTION

## Changes Made
$(git diff HEAD~1..HEAD --stat)

## Files Modified
$(git diff --name-only HEAD~1..HEAD)

## Commit
$(git rev-parse HEAD)

## Timestamp
$(date -u +%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%SZ)

---
*Executed in Quick Mode - minimal overhead execution*
EOF

echo "📝 Summary saved to: $summary_file"

Complete Example

User Request:

/octo:quick "fix typo in README - change 'recieve' to 'receive'"

Execution:

  1. Read the file

    Read README.md to locate the typo
  2. Make the change

    Edit README.md: replace "recieve" with "receive"
  3. Commit atomically

    git add README.md
    git commit -m "quick: fix typo in README (recieve → receive)
    
    Co-Authored-By: Claude Sonnet 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>"
  4. Record in state

    state-manager.sh write_decision "quick" \
      "Fixed typo in README" \
      "Ad-hoc documentation fix"
  5. Generate summary

    Created: .claude-octopus/quick/20260129-143045-summary.md
  6. Report to user

    ✅ Fixed typo in README.md
    📝 Commit: abc123f
    📋 Summary: .claude-octopus/quick/20260129-143045-summary.md

Benefits of Quick Mode

Speed ⚡

  • No multi-AI orchestration overhead
  • Direct implementation
  • Faster for simple tasks

Cost Savings 💰

  • No external provider API calls
  • Only uses Claude (included with Claude Code)
  • Efficient for ad-hoc work

Still Tracked 📊

  • Commits recorded
  • State updated
  • Summaries generated
  • Full audit trail maintained

Appropriate Scope 🎯

  • Right tool for small tasks
  • Doesn't over-engineer simple changes
  • Reserves full workflows for complex work

When Quick Mode Isn't Enough

If during execution you realize the task is more complex than expected:

Stop and escalate to full workflow:

This task is more complex than anticipated. I recommend using the full
workflow instead:

- For research: /octo:discover "research authentication patterns"
- For planning: /octo:define "define auth requirements"
- For building: /octo:develop "implement auth system"
- For validation: /octo:deliver "validate auth implementation"

Would you like me to switch to a full workflow?

Indicators to escalate:

  • Multiple files need changes
  • Requires architectural decisions
  • Needs research or comparison
  • Security implications
  • Performance implications
  • Breaking changes

Directory Structure

Quick mode creates summaries in a dedicated directory:

.claude-octopus/
└── quick/
    ├── 20260129-143045-summary.md
    ├── 20260129-150122-summary.md
    └── 20260129-161530-summary.md

Each summary includes:

  • Task description
  • Changes made
  • Files modified
  • Commit hash
  • Timestamp

Comparison: Quick Mode vs Full Workflow

Aspect Quick Mode ⚡ Full Workflow 🐙
Time 1-3 minutes 5-15 minutes
Cost Claude only Codex + Gemini + Claude
Providers 1 (Claude) 3 (multi-AI)
Research None Comprehensive
Planning None Detailed
Validation Basic Multi-AI review
Best For Simple fixes Complex features
When to Use Known solution Unknown solution

Best Practices

DO:

  • ✅ Use quick mode for straightforward tasks
  • ✅ Create descriptive commit messages
  • ✅ Generate summaries for audit trail
  • ✅ Update state even in quick mode
  • ✅ Escalate to full workflow if complexity increases

DON'T:

  • ❌ Use quick mode for new features
  • ❌ Skip commits (always commit atomically)
  • ❌ Skip state updates (maintain consistency)
  • ❌ Use quick mode for security-sensitive changes
  • ❌ Force quick mode when full workflow is appropriate

Troubleshooting

"Quick mode is taking too long"

→ Task is probably too complex. Escalate to full workflow.

"Change broke tests"

→ Quick mode assumes simple, safe changes. Use full workflow for risky changes.

"Need to research best approach"

→ Quick mode is for known solutions only. Use /octo:discover for research.

"Multiple files need changes"

→ Consider /octo:develop for coordinated multi-file changes.


Summary

Quick mode is the right tool for simple, straightforward tasks with known solutions. It provides fast execution while maintaining essential tracking and documentation.

For everything else, use the full Double Diamond workflow to ensure quality through multi-AI orchestration.

Remember: Fast is good, but correct is better. When in doubt, use the full workflow.