From ad-migration
Use automatically before any completion, successful, passing, PR-ready, merged, or stage-complete statement to verify fresh evidence and choose accurate claim wording.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/ad-migration:verifying-completion-claimsThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Verify completion-claim wording before the agent says work is complete, successful, passing, PR-ready, merged, or stage-complete.
Verify completion-claim wording before the agent says work is complete, successful, passing, PR-ready, merged, or stage-complete.
This skill is self-contained. Use it because the next response would make a completion claim, even when no slash command or seeded CLAUDE.md guidance explicitly called it.
The caller supplies free-form context:
Ask for no extra context when the local workspace can answer the evidence question directly.
Do not infer success from confidence, elapsed workflow steps, expected side effects, or sub-agent summaries.
Use the narrowest fresh evidence that proves the claim:
.migration-runs/ item and summary artifacts;Sub-agent reports are not sufficient evidence. Before repeating a sub-agent success claim, inspect the artifact, command output, diff, PR state, or plan state that proves it.
Return concise claim guidance:
verified: the exact claim is supported and may be stated.downgraded: only a narrower claim is supported; provide replacement wording.blocked: no completion claim should be made; name the missing or contradictory evidence.Include evidence bullets only when they help the final response stay precise.
partial, blocked, skipped, or warning evidence into success wording.npx claudepluginhub accelerate-data/vibedata-official --plugin ad-migrationMines projects and conversations into a searchable memory palace. Activates on queries about MemPalace, memory palace, mining, searching, palace setup, wings, rooms, drawers, or recalling past work.
Whole-repo audit for over-engineering: finds dead code, unnecessary abstractions, stdlib-replaceable dependencies. Outputs ranked findings and net line/dep savings.