openspec-continue-change — community openspec-continue-change, grind-it, community, ide skills, Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf

v1.0
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About this Skill

Perfect for Development Agents needing to manage and track changes in projects with advanced version control capabilities. Grind It is the perfect app for coffee lovers who grind their beans at home. Easily track your beans, their origins, and the ideal grind settings to brew the perfect cup every time.

fkoschi fkoschi
[2]
[0]
Updated: 2/24/2026

Agent Capability Analysis

The openspec-continue-change skill by fkoschi is an open-source community AI agent skill for Claude Code and other IDE workflows, helping agents execute tasks with better context, repeatability, and domain-specific guidance.

Ideal Agent Persona

Perfect for Development Agents needing to manage and track changes in projects with advanced version control capabilities.

Core Value

Empowers agents to efficiently continue working on changes by creating the next artifact, utilizing the openspec list command and AskUserQuestion tool to handle change selection and prompting, all while integrating with JSON data formats and command-line interfaces.

Capabilities Granted for openspec-continue-change

Automating change tracking in collaborative projects
Generating lists of available changes for user selection
Prompting users for change selection when names are omitted or ambiguous

! Prerequisites & Limits

  • Requires openspec installation and configuration
  • Dependent on conversation context for change name inference
  • Limited to top 3 changes for user selection
Labs Demo

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openspec-continue-change

Install openspec-continue-change, an AI agent skill for AI agent workflows and automation. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf with one-command...

SKILL.md
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Continue working on a change by creating the next artifact.

Input: Optionally specify a change name. If omitted, check if it can be inferred from conversation context. If vague or ambiguous you MUST prompt for available changes.

Steps

  1. If no change name provided, prompt for selection

    Run openspec list --json to get available changes sorted by most recently modified. Then use the AskUserQuestion tool to let the user select which change to work on.

    Present the top 3-4 most recently modified changes as options, showing:

    • Change name
    • Schema (from schema field if present, otherwise "spec-driven")
    • Status (e.g., "0/5 tasks", "complete", "no tasks")
    • How recently it was modified (from lastModified field)

    Mark the most recently modified change as "(Recommended)" since it's likely what the user wants to continue.

    IMPORTANT: Do NOT guess or auto-select a change. Always let the user choose.

  2. Check current status

    bash
    1openspec status --change "<name>" --json

    Parse the JSON to understand current state. The response includes:

    • schemaName: The workflow schema being used (e.g., "spec-driven")
    • artifacts: Array of artifacts with their status ("done", "ready", "blocked")
    • isComplete: Boolean indicating if all artifacts are complete
  3. Act based on status:


    If all artifacts are complete (isComplete: true):

    • Congratulate the user
    • Show final status including the schema used
    • Suggest: "All artifacts created! You can now implement this change or archive it."
    • STOP

    If artifacts are ready to create (status shows artifacts with status: "ready"):

    • Pick the FIRST artifact with status: "ready" from the status output
    • Get its instructions:
      bash
      1openspec instructions <artifact-id> --change "<name>" --json
    • Parse the JSON. The key fields are:
      • context: Project background (constraints for you - do NOT include in output)
      • rules: Artifact-specific rules (constraints for you - do NOT include in output)
      • template: The structure to use for your output file
      • instruction: Schema-specific guidance
      • outputPath: Where to write the artifact
      • dependencies: Completed artifacts to read for context
    • Create the artifact file:
      • Read any completed dependency files for context
      • Use template as the structure - fill in its sections
      • Apply context and rules as constraints when writing - but do NOT copy them into the file
      • Write to the output path specified in instructions
    • Show what was created and what's now unlocked
    • STOP after creating ONE artifact

    If no artifacts are ready (all blocked):

    • This shouldn't happen with a valid schema
    • Show status and suggest checking for issues
  4. After creating an artifact, show progress

    bash
    1openspec status --change "<name>"

Output

After each invocation, show:

  • Which artifact was created
  • Schema workflow being used
  • Current progress (N/M complete)
  • What artifacts are now unlocked
  • Prompt: "Want to continue? Just ask me to continue or tell me what to do next."

Artifact Creation Guidelines

The artifact types and their purpose depend on the schema. Use the instruction field from the instructions output to understand what to create.

Common artifact patterns:

spec-driven schema (proposal → specs → design → tasks):

  • proposal.md: Ask user about the change if not clear. Fill in Why, What Changes, Capabilities, Impact.
    • The Capabilities section is critical - each capability listed will need a spec file.
  • specs/<capability>/spec.md: Create one spec per capability listed in the proposal's Capabilities section (use the capability name, not the change name).
  • design.md: Document technical decisions, architecture, and implementation approach.
  • tasks.md: Break down implementation into checkboxed tasks.

For other schemas, follow the instruction field from the CLI output.

Guardrails

  • Create ONE artifact per invocation
  • Always read dependency artifacts before creating a new one
  • Never skip artifacts or create out of order
  • If context is unclear, ask the user before creating
  • Verify the artifact file exists after writing before marking progress
  • Use the schema's artifact sequence, don't assume specific artifact names
  • IMPORTANT: context and rules are constraints for YOU, not content for the file
    • Do NOT copy <context>, <rules>, <project_context> blocks into the artifact
    • These guide what you write, but should never appear in the output

FAQ & Installation Steps

These questions and steps mirror the structured data on this page for better search understanding.

? Frequently Asked Questions

What is openspec-continue-change?

Perfect for Development Agents needing to manage and track changes in projects with advanced version control capabilities. Grind It is the perfect app for coffee lovers who grind their beans at home. Easily track your beans, their origins, and the ideal grind settings to brew the perfect cup every time.

How do I install openspec-continue-change?

Run the command: npx killer-skills add fkoschi/grind-it/openspec-continue-change. It works with Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, Claude Code, and 19+ other IDEs.

What are the use cases for openspec-continue-change?

Key use cases include: Automating change tracking in collaborative projects, Generating lists of available changes for user selection, Prompting users for change selection when names are omitted or ambiguous.

Which IDEs are compatible with openspec-continue-change?

This skill is compatible with Cursor, Windsurf, VS Code, Trae, Claude Code, OpenClaw, Aider, Codex, OpenCode, Goose, Cline, Roo Code, Kiro, Augment Code, Continue, GitHub Copilot, Sourcegraph Cody, and Amazon Q Developer. Use the Killer-Skills CLI for universal one-command installation.

Are there any limitations for openspec-continue-change?

Requires openspec installation and configuration. Dependent on conversation context for change name inference. Limited to top 3 changes for user selection.

How To Install

  1. 1. Open your terminal

    Open the terminal or command line in your project directory.

  2. 2. Run the install command

    Run: npx killer-skills add fkoschi/grind-it/openspec-continue-change. The CLI will automatically detect your IDE or AI agent and configure the skill.

  3. 3. Start using the skill

    The skill is now active. Your AI agent can use openspec-continue-change immediately in the current project.

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