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<title>rulesets/docs/design/2026-06-10-daily-prep-template-spec.org, branch main</title>
<subtitle>Claude Code skills, rules, and language bundles
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<id>https://git.cjennings.net/rulesets/atom?h=main</id>
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<updated>2026-06-11T10:07:33+00:00</updated>
<entry>
<title>feat(workflows): rewrite daily-prep to the strict three-section template</title>
<updated>2026-06-11T10:07:33+00:00</updated>
<author>
<name>Craig Jennings</name>
<email>c@cjennings.net</email>
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<published>2026-06-11T10:07:33+00:00</published>
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From the template spec Craig wrote 2026-06-10 plus four refinements from his review of the first new-format prep. The doc is now exactly Heads-Up, Day's Priorities, and Meetings / Focus Blocks. Two run modes replace full-prep and standup-only: Create ends with a mandatory priorities review gate (disagreement there signals todo.org staleness), and Update refreshes a day when the world moves. Both run a triage-intake first when none ran in the last hour.

It retires the separate Standup Briefs and Upcoming Deadlines sections, the Anchor Tasks handoff, and the thin-link convention. Priorities entries now mirror their todo.org task heading and carry links and context in the body. Briefs nest under the standup they're reported in, with Blockers: None explicit. Meetings carry what to contribute and get, likely questions with answers, linked prep docs, and day-before prep blocks for unanswered questions. Focus blocks are linked menus, created the day before and marked free.

The spec and the decisions handoff land in docs/design/.
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