claude-code/plugins/plugin-dev/skills/agent-development/references/system-prompt-design.md
Daisy S. Hollman 387dc35db7
feat: Add plugin-dev toolkit for comprehensive plugin development
Adds the plugin-dev plugin to public marketplace. A comprehensive toolkit for
developing Claude Code plugins with 7 expert skills, 3 AI-assisted agents, and
extensive documentation covering the complete plugin development lifecycle.

Key features:
- 7 skills: hook-development, mcp-integration, plugin-structure, plugin-settings,
  command-development, agent-development, skill-development
- 3 agents: agent-creator (AI-assisted generation), plugin-validator (structure
  validation), skill-reviewer (quality review)
- 1 command: /plugin-dev:create-plugin (guided 8-phase workflow)
- 10 utility scripts for validation and testing
- 21 reference docs with deep-dive guidance (~11k words)
- 9 working examples demonstrating best practices

Changes for public release:
- Replaced all references to internal repositories with "Claude Code"
- Updated MCP examples: internal.company.com → api.example.com
- Updated token variables: ${INTERNAL_TOKEN} → ${API_TOKEN}
- Reframed agent-creation-system-prompt as "proven in production"
- Preserved all ${CLAUDE_PLUGIN_ROOT} references (186 total)
- Preserved valuable test blocks in core modules

Validation:
- All 3 agents validated successfully with validate-agent.sh
- All JSON files validated with jq
- Zero internal references remaining
- 59 files migrated, 21,971 lines added

🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-11-17 04:09:00 -08:00

411 lines
9.8 KiB
Markdown

# System Prompt Design Patterns
Complete guide to writing effective agent system prompts that enable autonomous, high-quality operation.
## Core Structure
Every agent system prompt should follow this proven structure:
```markdown
You are [specific role] specializing in [specific domain].
**Your Core Responsibilities:**
1. [Primary responsibility - the main task]
2. [Secondary responsibility - supporting task]
3. [Additional responsibilities as needed]
**[Task Name] Process:**
1. [First concrete step]
2. [Second concrete step]
3. [Continue with clear steps]
[...]
**Quality Standards:**
- [Standard 1 with specifics]
- [Standard 2 with specifics]
- [Standard 3 with specifics]
**Output Format:**
Provide results structured as:
- [Component 1]
- [Component 2]
- [Include specific formatting requirements]
**Edge Cases:**
Handle these situations:
- [Edge case 1]: [Specific handling approach]
- [Edge case 2]: [Specific handling approach]
```
## Pattern 1: Analysis Agents
For agents that analyze code, PRs, or documentation:
```markdown
You are an expert [domain] analyzer specializing in [specific analysis type].
**Your Core Responsibilities:**
1. Thoroughly analyze [what] for [specific issues]
2. Identify [patterns/problems/opportunities]
3. Provide actionable recommendations
**Analysis Process:**
1. **Gather Context**: Read [what] using available tools
2. **Initial Scan**: Identify obvious [issues/patterns]
3. **Deep Analysis**: Examine [specific aspects]:
- [Aspect 1]: Check for [criteria]
- [Aspect 2]: Verify [criteria]
- [Aspect 3]: Assess [criteria]
4. **Synthesize Findings**: Group related issues
5. **Prioritize**: Rank by [severity/impact/urgency]
6. **Generate Report**: Format according to output template
**Quality Standards:**
- Every finding includes file:line reference
- Issues categorized by severity (critical/major/minor)
- Recommendations are specific and actionable
- Positive observations included for balance
**Output Format:**
## Summary
[2-3 sentence overview]
## Critical Issues
- [file:line] - [Issue description] - [Recommendation]
## Major Issues
[...]
## Minor Issues
[...]
## Recommendations
[...]
**Edge Cases:**
- No issues found: Provide positive feedback and validation
- Too many issues: Group and prioritize top 10
- Unclear code: Request clarification rather than guessing
```
## Pattern 2: Generation Agents
For agents that create code, tests, or documentation:
```markdown
You are an expert [domain] engineer specializing in creating high-quality [output type].
**Your Core Responsibilities:**
1. Generate [what] that meets [quality standards]
2. Follow [specific conventions/patterns]
3. Ensure [correctness/completeness/clarity]
**Generation Process:**
1. **Understand Requirements**: Analyze what needs to be created
2. **Gather Context**: Read existing [code/docs/tests] for patterns
3. **Design Structure**: Plan [architecture/organization/flow]
4. **Generate Content**: Create [output] following:
- [Convention 1]
- [Convention 2]
- [Best practice 1]
5. **Validate**: Verify [correctness/completeness]
6. **Document**: Add comments/explanations as needed
**Quality Standards:**
- Follows project conventions (check CLAUDE.md)
- [Specific quality metric 1]
- [Specific quality metric 2]
- Includes error handling
- Well-documented and clear
**Output Format:**
Create [what] with:
- [Structure requirement 1]
- [Structure requirement 2]
- Clear, descriptive naming
- Comprehensive coverage
**Edge Cases:**
- Insufficient context: Ask user for clarification
- Conflicting patterns: Follow most recent/explicit pattern
- Complex requirements: Break into smaller pieces
```
## Pattern 3: Validation Agents
For agents that validate, check, or verify:
```markdown
You are an expert [domain] validator specializing in ensuring [quality aspect].
**Your Core Responsibilities:**
1. Validate [what] against [criteria]
2. Identify violations and issues
3. Provide clear pass/fail determination
**Validation Process:**
1. **Load Criteria**: Understand validation requirements
2. **Scan Target**: Read [what] needs validation
3. **Check Rules**: For each rule:
- [Rule 1]: [Validation method]
- [Rule 2]: [Validation method]
4. **Collect Violations**: Document each failure with details
5. **Assess Severity**: Categorize issues
6. **Determine Result**: Pass only if [criteria met]
**Quality Standards:**
- All violations include specific locations
- Severity clearly indicated
- Fix suggestions provided
- No false positives
**Output Format:**
## Validation Result: [PASS/FAIL]
## Summary
[Overall assessment]
## Violations Found: [count]
### Critical ([count])
- [Location]: [Issue] - [Fix]
### Warnings ([count])
- [Location]: [Issue] - [Fix]
## Recommendations
[How to fix violations]
**Edge Cases:**
- No violations: Confirm validation passed
- Too many violations: Group by type, show top 20
- Ambiguous rules: Document uncertainty, request clarification
```
## Pattern 4: Orchestration Agents
For agents that coordinate multiple tools or steps:
```markdown
You are an expert [domain] orchestrator specializing in coordinating [complex workflow].
**Your Core Responsibilities:**
1. Coordinate [multi-step process]
2. Manage [resources/tools/dependencies]
3. Ensure [successful completion/integration]
**Orchestration Process:**
1. **Plan**: Understand full workflow and dependencies
2. **Prepare**: Set up prerequisites
3. **Execute Phases**:
- Phase 1: [What] using [tools]
- Phase 2: [What] using [tools]
- Phase 3: [What] using [tools]
4. **Monitor**: Track progress and handle failures
5. **Verify**: Confirm successful completion
6. **Report**: Provide comprehensive summary
**Quality Standards:**
- Each phase completes successfully
- Errors handled gracefully
- Progress reported to user
- Final state verified
**Output Format:**
## Workflow Execution Report
### Completed Phases
- [Phase]: [Result]
### Results
- [Output 1]
- [Output 2]
### Next Steps
[If applicable]
**Edge Cases:**
- Phase failure: Attempt retry, then report and stop
- Missing dependencies: Request from user
- Timeout: Report partial completion
```
## Writing Style Guidelines
### Tone and Voice
**Use second person (addressing the agent):**
```
✅ You are responsible for...
✅ You will analyze...
✅ Your process should...
❌ The agent is responsible for...
❌ This agent will analyze...
❌ I will analyze...
```
### Clarity and Specificity
**Be specific, not vague:**
```
✅ Check for SQL injection by examining all database queries for parameterization
❌ Look for security issues
✅ Provide file:line references for each finding
❌ Show where issues are
✅ Categorize as critical (security), major (bugs), or minor (style)
❌ Rate the severity of issues
```
### Actionable Instructions
**Give concrete steps:**
```
✅ Read the file using the Read tool, then search for patterns using Grep
❌ Analyze the code
✅ Generate test file at test/path/to/file.test.ts
❌ Create tests
```
## Common Pitfalls
### ❌ Vague Responsibilities
```markdown
**Your Core Responsibilities:**
1. Help the user with their code
2. Provide assistance
3. Be helpful
```
**Why bad:** Not specific enough to guide behavior.
### ✅ Specific Responsibilities
```markdown
**Your Core Responsibilities:**
1. Analyze TypeScript code for type safety issues
2. Identify missing type annotations and improper 'any' usage
3. Recommend specific type improvements with examples
```
### ❌ Missing Process Steps
```markdown
Analyze the code and provide feedback.
```
**Why bad:** Agent doesn't know HOW to analyze.
### ✅ Clear Process
```markdown
**Analysis Process:**
1. Read code files using Read tool
2. Scan for type annotations on all functions
3. Check for 'any' type usage
4. Verify generic type parameters
5. List findings with file:line references
```
### ❌ Undefined Output
```markdown
Provide a report.
```
**Why bad:** Agent doesn't know what format to use.
### ✅ Defined Output Format
```markdown
**Output Format:**
## Type Safety Report
### Summary
[Overview of findings]
### Issues Found
- `file.ts:42` - Missing return type on `processData`
- `utils.ts:15` - Unsafe 'any' usage in parameter
### Recommendations
[Specific fixes with examples]
```
## Length Guidelines
### Minimum Viable Agent
**~500 words minimum:**
- Role description
- 3 core responsibilities
- 5-step process
- Output format
### Standard Agent
**~1,000-2,000 words:**
- Detailed role and expertise
- 5-8 responsibilities
- 8-12 process steps
- Quality standards
- Output format
- 3-5 edge cases
### Comprehensive Agent
**~2,000-5,000 words:**
- Complete role with background
- Comprehensive responsibilities
- Detailed multi-phase process
- Extensive quality standards
- Multiple output formats
- Many edge cases
- Examples within system prompt
**Avoid > 10,000 words:** Too long, diminishing returns.
## Testing System Prompts
### Test Completeness
Can the agent handle these based on system prompt alone?
- [ ] Typical task execution
- [ ] Edge cases mentioned
- [ ] Error scenarios
- [ ] Unclear requirements
- [ ] Large/complex inputs
- [ ] Empty/missing inputs
### Test Clarity
Read the system prompt and ask:
- Can another developer understand what this agent does?
- Are process steps clear and actionable?
- Is output format unambiguous?
- Are quality standards measurable?
### Iterate Based on Results
After testing agent:
1. Identify where it struggled
2. Add missing guidance to system prompt
3. Clarify ambiguous instructions
4. Add process steps for edge cases
5. Re-test
## Conclusion
Effective system prompts are:
- **Specific**: Clear about what and how
- **Structured**: Organized with clear sections
- **Complete**: Covers normal and edge cases
- **Actionable**: Provides concrete steps
- **Testable**: Defines measurable standards
Use the patterns above as templates, customize for your domain, and iterate based on agent performance.