From Agent-Native Plan
Turn ordinary text plans into rich interactive visual plans with diagrams, file maps, annotated code, open questions, and UI/prototype review when useful.
How this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/agent-native-visual-plans:visual-planThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Agent-Native Plans is structured visual planning mode for coding agents. Build
Agent-Native Plans is structured visual planning mode for coding agents. Build the plan you would normally write in Markdown, but as a scannable document with editable blocks mixed in: inline diagrams, code snippets, open questions, and an optional top visual review area (wireframe canvas, live prototype, or both in tabs). Architecture and backend plans stay document-only; UI and product plans start with the top canvas/prototype (the Visual Surface Choice section owns that rule).
/visual-plan is the packaged command and main entry point. Choose the review
mode from the task: UI-first when the work is primarily product UI and review
should start with screens, prototype-first when review should start with a
functional live prototype, design-first when review needs full-fidelity branded
screens, or visual-intake when the user explicitly wants a questionnaire before
planning. When a Codex, Claude Code, Markdown, or pasted plan already exists,
/visual-plan uses that source plan as the starting point and builds the review
surface from it instead of starting over.
Create or adapt a visual plan whenever the plan would be better as a reviewable artifact than a chat paragraph. This includes modest work such as a single UI surface with states, a small workflow, a before/after product change, or a component/API/data-shape decision that needs alignment, plus larger multi-file, ambiguous, long-running, risky, or UI-heavy work. Use it when architecture / data flow / UI direction / options / open questions would benefit from inline diagrams or structured blocks, when the user needs to react to a direction before you implement, or when an existing text plan needs a richer review surface.
actions/ before proposing endpoints and prefer
named client helpers over raw fetch. Delegate wide exploration to a sub-agent.
Lead with reuse: for each step, name what it reuses — existing actions, schema,
components, helpers — before what it adds, so the plan explains the genuinely new
delta instead of redescribing what already exists.create-visual-questions for
ordinary clarification or preflight; reserve it for the visual-intake mode when
the user explicitly asks for a visual intake questionnaire. Otherwise state the
assumption explicitly and proceed, and keep anything unresolved in the plan's
single bottom question-form Open Questions block. For complex plans, do a
final open-question pass before handoff: if a decision would affect
architecture, scope, UX, data shape, or rollout, either decide it in the plan
with rationale or put it in that bottom form with a recommended default.update-visual-plan rather than only changing course in
chat, and make the updated document stand alone. Do not describe the update as
a correction to an earlier draft inside the plan itself. Re-read the approved
plan before major steps.The deliverable is ALWAYS a structured Agent-Native Plan, not a chat-only plan.
The hosted Plan MCP connector (plan server, or legacy agent-native-plans) is
the default collaboration and commenting surface; it is not a reason to reject
the planning pattern as an external dependency or rented layer. Plans are
portable source artifacts (plan.mdx, optional canvas.mdx /
prototype.mdx, JSON, and HTML export), and ownership-sensitive workflows can
use local-files mode or a self-hosted/custom Plan app URL without abandoning the
skill's review discipline. Do not advise the user to skip /visual-plan because
the default surface is hosted; choose the right Plan mode for the user's
ownership, privacy, sharing, and branding needs.
By default, create the plan via the Plan MCP connector and NEVER hand it over as
inline chat content — no Markdown prose, ASCII sketch, table, or fenced
wireframe. If the plan (or legacy agent-native-plans) tools are not visible,
discover them through the host's tool_search first; if they are still missing,
STOP and give the user the client-specific reconnect step rather than improvising
an inline plan. Before publishing, or whenever a connector or auth error appears,
READ references/connection.md in this skill directory — it is the single source
of truth for the never-inline rule, connector discovery, and the per-client
reconnect steps. Local-files privacy mode (after Tool Guidance) is the exception.
This section describes the default hosted Plan MCP workflow. If
AGENT_NATIVE_PLANS_MODE=local-files is set, or the user asks for fully local
files/no hosted Plan writes, use Local-Files Privacy Mode instead; carry
forward only the code-research and plan-composition guidance here.
get-plan-blocks for the authoritative block catalog — do not author
from memorized tags. Then call the mode-matched create tool:
create-visual-plan for document-first plans (architecture, backend, data,
refactor, API), create-ui-plan for UI-first plans, create-prototype-plan
for prototype-first plans, create-plan-design for design-first plans,
create-visual-questions only when the user explicitly asks for a visual
intake questionnaire. When a source plan already exists,
pass it as planText and preserve the original plan's useful intent while
producing a standalone plan document, not a revision memo.references/canvas.md and references/document-quality.md). For
broad product architecture plans with a user-facing implication, add a
concrete "what this looks like in the app" visual before the abstract
architecture or mode tables. Keep the document close to the standalone
Markdown plan the agent would normally output. If an existing plan was
provided, carry forward the right facts and decisions without referring to
the previous draft or explaining how this version differs. For non-visual
plans, skip the top visual surface (Visual Surface Choice below owns the rule)
and put diagram, data-model,
api-endpoint, diff, file-tree, code, and annotated-code blocks
directly next to the relevant prose.
Wide document layout is renderer-owned and intentionally allowlisted: only
literal code-review surfaces (diff, annotated-code) and tabs blocks
with vertical orientation or diff-like children break out wider than prose.
Keep api-endpoint, openapi-spec, data-model, json-explorer,
wireframe, question, and custom-html blocks in normal document flow unless
their own renderer says otherwise.get-plan-feedback before editing, after review,
after any long pause,
and before the final response. Treat anchorDetails, resolver intent, recent
review events, and any focused screenshots from browser handoff as the source
of truth for exactly what changed and exactly what each comment points at.update-visual-plan, preferring
targeted contentPatches.
Treat the top-level content payload as a full replacement, not a merge; do
not send a partial content object to add a canvas or one block. If a full
replacement is unavoidable, first read the complete plan source/content, carry
forward every existing block and visual surface, and verify the source/export
afterward so the document body was not truncated. When the user wants
source-control friendly edits, use patch-visual-plan-source against the MDX
files instead of regenerating the plan.export-visual-plan only when the user wants a
shareable receipt or repo-check-in artifacts.For high-stakes plans — architecture, backend, data-model, migration, multi-file, or otherwise risky work — run one adversarial self-review pass before treating the plan as final. Skip it for small, UI-only, or single-decision plans where the cost outweighs the value. Keep the pass cheap and non-blocking:
update-visual-plan
contentPatches — vague non-goals, unanchored claims, an obvious missing
decision. Route genuine judgment calls back to the user instead: add them to the
bottom question-form Open Questions block or batch them into the normal
ask-user-question flow. Do not silently decide them.Choose the surface before creating the plan or after reading the source plan. Do not add visual chrome by default:
For UI/product plans, the top canvas is usually the primary review surface. Put
the first meaningful wireframes there, not buried as document-body blocks. Use
multiple canvas artboards when states matter, such as the default view, an
overflow menu or popover, a side panel, loading, or error. Put short annotations
beside frames with targetId plus placement; keep implementation details,
tradeoffs, file maps, data contracts, risks, and verification in the document
body below the canvas.
When the user asks for a flow, storyboard, journey, wireframe, canvas, or "what
this looks like", treat that as a canvas-first request. Make one artboard per
user-visible state, connect only adjacent transitions, and use short canvas
annotations for the product notes. Do not substitute a document-body diagram
block for the requested storyboard just because HTML diagrams are faster to
write; diagrams belong below the canvas for backend mechanics, architecture, or
data-flow explanation.
Keep product wireframes and explanatory/meta diagrams separate. Start with pure screens that look like the app state under discussion, without callout prose or architecture notes embedded inside the UI. Put arrows, labels, contracts, data flow, and mode explanations in separate annotations, separate canvas diagrams, or the document body.
When the plan touches an existing app, inspect the current shell/components before drawing. The first artboard should look like the real app at the same density: existing sidebars, toolbar placement, overflow menus, app chrome, and framework agent chrome stay in their real places. Model secondary surfaces as separate states, such as a top-right overflow popover, sheet, panel, loading state, or separate AgentSidebar, rather than inventing a permanent inspector or folding framework chrome into the product UI.
content.canvas and omit content.prototype.content.canvas, add the aligned functional prototype in
content.prototype, and rely on the top visual tabs to switch between them.create-prototype-plan, which still preserves static
mocks where useful.For mixed canvas + prototype plans, reuse the same real labels, app statuses, and screen ids across both surfaces. The canvas is the inspectable static reference; the prototype is the interactive version of that same flow, not a separate design direction.
references/wireframe.mdUI recap/plan wireframes must meet a strict quality bar — full-width chrome,
pinned bottom bars, real product content, before/after comparability, the right
surface preset, --wf-* tokens instead of hex, and no <html>/<style>/font
tags. Before authoring ANY wireframe / <Screen> / WireframeBlock, READ
references/wireframe.md in this skill directory — it is the single source of
truth for HTML wireframe quality, shared word for word with /visual-plan
and /visual-recap. Do not author wireframes from memory.
references/canvas.mdThe canvas is the single source of truth for static UI mockups: the surface
locks each artboard's footprint, mixed surfaces lay out
in lanes, annotations are plain-text designer notes anchored by
targetId/placement, and edits are surgical contentPatches. Before
authoring or editing ANY canvas, artboard, or annotation, READ
references/canvas.md in this skill directory — it is the single source of truth
for canvas/artboard mechanics. Do not author canvas layouts from memory.
Canvas artboards use the same HTML wireframe path as document-body
WireframeBlock screens: author <Screen surface="..." html={...} /> with a
semantic HTML fragment. Do not author fresh kit-tree children such as
<FrameScreen>, <Card>, <Row>, or <Btn> inside canvas <Screen> tags;
those are legacy compatibility markup for old plans and produce brittle canvas
layouts.
references/document-quality.mdThe document is a serious technical plan, not marketing: outcome-first,
prose-first, self-contained, built from the right native blocks, with open
questions in a single bottom question-form and a pre-handoff visual check.
Before authoring the plan document, READ references/document-quality.md in this
skill directory — it is the single source of truth for the document quality bar.
Do not write the document from memory.
references/exemplar.mdFor a worked example of the bar — a great UI-first plan and /visual-plan, plus
the anti-patterns to avoid — READ references/exemplar.md in this skill
directory before authoring a plan.
create-visual-plan: start one structured visual plan per agent task/run, or
import an existing text plan by passing planText; content may include no
visual surface, canvas only, or canvas + prototype.create-ui-plan: start a UI-first plan when the work is primarily product UI.create-prototype-plan: start a prototype-first plan with a functional top
review surface.create-plan-design: start a full-fidelity branded Design-tab plan with an
optional matching Prototype tab.convert-visual-plan-to-prototype: convert an existing HTML wireframe canvas
into a prototype plan.create-visual-questions: use only when the user explicitly asks for a visual
intake questionnaire, not as /visual-plan preflight.update-visual-plan: revise content, status, or comments with targeted
contentPatches (see Core Workflow step 6).read-visual-plan-source: read the normalized plan as plan.mdx,
optional canvas.mdx, optional .plan-state.json, and JSON.patch-visual-plan-source: apply granular MDX AST patches by stable block,
artboard, annotation, component, or wireframe-node id.import-visual-plan-source: create or replace a plan from an MDX folder.get-visual-plan: read the current structured plan, exported HTML, and
annotations; it also returns the MDX folder for source workflows.get-plan-feedback: read unconsumed human feedback. Use it frequently; it
returns grouped threads, exact anchor details, expected resolver, and recent
review-event payloads so agents can act only on the comments meant for them.get-plan-blocks: resolve block tags before authoring — do not memorize tags;
call this first to get the authoritative tag names, required fields, and prop
shapes from the live block registry.export-visual-plan: export HTML, Markdown fallback, structured JSON, and MDX
files for repo check-in.When the user critiques a plan's look or structure, fix the renderer or this skill — never hand-edit one stored plan. Turn feedback into better guidance.
references/local-files.mdWhen the user wants no hosted Plan database writes — no DB writes, no Plan MCP
publish, fully local/offline/private planning, repo-owned source-controlled
artifacts, or AGENT_NATIVE_PLANS_MODE=local-files — do not call any hosted Plan
tool except the schema-only get-plan-blocks catalog lookup. Author a local MDX
folder and
preview it with plan local check / plan local serve / plan local verify.
Before using local-files mode, READ references/local-files.md in this skill
directory — it is the single source of truth for the full contract (catalog
lookup, MDX folder layout, the local bridge commands, and the hosted tools you
must not call). Carry forward only the code-research and plan-composition
guidance from Core Workflow; everything hosted is replaced by the local bridge.
This section applies to hosted plans with get-plan-feedback /
update-visual-plan. In local-files mode, do not call hosted feedback or update
tools; interpret file/chat feedback directly, edit the MDX files, rerun the
local bridge check/serve/verify command, and report the new local URL.
get-plan-feedback returns rich anchors — read them before acting on any comment.
targetX/targetY are percentages within the
element named by targetSelector/targetKind. Bare x/y are percentages
of the whole plan document. canvasX/canvasY are raw board-world pixels on
the design canvas (board size given when available).targetNodeId and
targetNodePath (e.g. card > list > listItem "Acme Inc") identifying the
exact kit node. Use targetNodeId directly with wireframe node patch ops;
use data-design-id values from design artboards with
update-design-element-style. Prefer the node id/path over raw coordinates;
fall back to coordinates plus the focused screenshot (red ring marks the exact
point) only when no node id is present.textQuote against current prose using
contextBefore/contextAfter for disambiguation. If ambiguous: true, ask
the user — do not guess which occurrence is meant.get-plan-feedback flags threads whose quoted text no
longer exists as detached (in detachedThreads). Reconcile these against
rewritten content — never silently drop them.resolutionTarget is the only routing signal: act on agent,
treat human as context only. @mentions are people to notify, never a
routing signal.consumedCommentIds on update-visual-plan). Set status=resolved only on
agent-targeted comments you actually addressed; leave human-targeted comments
open.Use set-resource-visibility to change who can see a plan (e.g. public, login,
or org-scoped). Use share-resource to grant specific users or roles access
by email or role. Gate visibility before sharing any plan that covers
unreleased or private work — default to the narrowest scope that meets the
review need.
There are two ways into Plans.
Coding agent (CLI). Install once with the Agent-Native CLI. The command installs the Plans skills, registers the hosted Plans MCP connector, and runs auth/setup for the selected local client(s) in the same step (a one-time browser sign-in at setup — this is intended), so the first tool call in that client does not hit an OAuth wall:
npx @agent-native/core@latest skills add visual-plans
After that, /visual-plan, /visual-recap, and /visualize-repo are the
installed slash commands. If you only need one command, use
skills add visual-plan, skills add visual-recap, or
skills add visualize-repo instead. The other planning modes
(create-ui-plan, create-prototype-plan, create-plan-design,
create-visual-questions) are MCP tools reachable from /visual-plan, not
separate slash commands. Pass --no-connect to register the connector without
authenticating, then run
npx @agent-native/core@latest connect https://plan.agent-native.com --client all
whenever you are ready, or choose a narrower --client. Auth and MCP tool
loading are per client config/session.
Browser (people you share with). Open the Plans editor and create & edit with no sign-up — you work as a guest. Sign in only when you want to save or share; signing in claims the plans you made as a guest into your account.
Sharing and commenting require an account: public/shared plans are viewable by anyone with the link, but commenting on them needs an agent-native account.
For fully offline, no-account use, run the Plans app locally and sync plans to your repo as MDX. This local mode is a separate advanced path, not the default hosted flow.
For repo-wide visual docs, run
npx @agent-native/core@latest visualize-repo --open to create/update
agent-native.json, seed .agent-native/visual-docs/repo-overview, and open
the local bridge.
If a Plans tool returns needs auth, Unauthorized, or Session terminated, do
not keep retrying it — stop and give the user the per-client reconnect step from
references/connection.md, then continue once the connector is available.
Hosted default: connect https://plan.agent-native.com/_agent-native/mcp. Do
not put shared secrets in skill files.
npx claudepluginhub vzn-care/agent-native --plugin agent-native-visual-plansGuides creation and editing of skills using test-driven development with pressure scenarios and subagents to verify agent compliance.
Guides reception of code review feedback: verify before implementing, avoid performative agreement, push back with technical reasoning when needed.
Runs a structured interview session to sharpen plans or designs, producing ADRs and a glossary as output.