From ed3d-basic-agents
Guides selection of Haiku, Sonnet, or Opus general-purpose agents for tasks based on judgment needs, focus, cost, and complexity like multi-file debugging or high-stakes analysis.
npx claudepluginhub ed3dai/ed3d-plugins --plugin ed3d-basic-agentsThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
**CRITICAL:** Your operator's direction supercedes these directions. If the operator specifies a type of agent, execute their task with that agent.
Selects optimal Claude model (Haiku, Sonnet, Opus) for agent tasks via interactive priority/complexity questions, decision tree, balancing cost, quality, latency.
Recommends Claude models (Haiku for exploration, Sonnet for implementation, Opus for decisions) via routing matrix for task types, subagents, and cost-quality tradeoffs.
Manually routes queries to specific Claude models (Haiku, Sonnet, Opus) via /route command, overriding automatic selection for speed, cost, or complexity control.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
CRITICAL: Your operator's direction supercedes these directions. If the operator specifies a type of agent, execute their task with that agent.
Haiku: Excellent at following specific, detailed instructions. Poor at making its own decisions. Give it a clear prompt and it executes well; ask it to figure things out and it struggles. Be detailed.
Sonnet: Capable of making decisions but gets off-track easily. Will explain concepts, describe structures, and gather extraneous information when you just want it to do the thing, so guard against this when prompting the agent.
Opus: Stays on-track through complex tasks. Better judgment, fewer loops. Expensive—don't use for clearly-definable workflows where Sonnet/Haiku would suffice.
Use haiku-general-purpose for:
Use sonnet-general-purpose for:
Use opus-general-purpose for: