Agent Coordination with dex Command Invocation
Use dex directly for all commands. If not on PATH, use npx @zeeg/dex instead.
command -v dex &>/dev/null && echo "use: dex" || echo "use: npx @zeeg/dex"
Core Principle: Tickets, Not Todos
Dex tasks are tickets - structured artifacts with comprehensive context:
Name: One-line summary (issue title) Description: Full background, requirements, approach (issue body) Result: Implementation details, decisions, outcomes (PR description)
Think: "Would someone understand the what, why, and how from this task alone?"
Dex Tasks are Ephemeral
Never reference dex task IDs in external artifacts (commits, PRs, docs). Task IDs like abc123 become meaningless once tasks are completed. Describe the work itself, not the task that tracked it.
When to Use dex
Use dex when:
Breaking down complexity into subtasks Work spans multiple sessions Context needs to persist for handoffs Recording decisions for future reference
Skip dex when:
Work is a single atomic action Everything fits in one session with no follow-up Overhead exceeds value dex vs Built-in Task Tools
Some AI agents (like Claude Code) have built-in task tools. These are session-only and not the same as dex.
dex Built-in Task Tools
Persistence Files in .dex/ Session-only Context Rich (description + context + result) Basic Hierarchy 3-level (epic → task → subtask) Flat
Use dex for persistent work. Use built-in task tools for ephemeral in-session tracking only.
Basic Workflow Create a Task dex create "Short name" --description "Full implementation context"
Description should include: what needs to be done, why, implementation approach, and acceptance criteria. See examples.md for good/bad examples.
List and View Tasks
dex list # Pending tasks
dex list --ready # Unblocked tasks
dex show
Complete a Task
dex complete
Always verify before completing. Results must include evidence: test counts, build status, manual testing outcomes. See verification.md for the full checklist.
Edit and Delete
dex edit
For full CLI reference including blockers, see cli-reference.md.
Understanding Task Fields
Tasks have two text fields:
Name: Brief one-line summary (shown in dex list) Description: Full details - requirements, approach, acceptance criteria (shown with --full)
When you run dex show
Gathering Context
When picking up a task, gather all relevant context:
dex show
Before starting, verify you can answer:
What needs to be done specifically? Why is this needed? How should it be implemented? When is it done (acceptance criteria)?
If any answer is unclear:
Check parent task or completed blockers for more details Suggest entering plan mode to flesh out requirements before starting
Proceed without full context when:
Task is trivial/atomic (e.g., "Add .gitignore entry") Conversation already provides the missing context Description itself is sufficiently detailed Task Hierarchies
Three levels: Epic (large initiative) → Task (significant work) → Subtask (atomic step).
Choosing the right level:
Small feature (1-2 files) → Single task Medium feature (3-7 steps) → Task with subtasks Large initiative (5+ tasks) → Epic with tasks
Create subtask under parent
dex create --parent
For detailed hierarchy guidance, see hierarchies.md.
Recording Results
Complete tasks immediately after implementing AND verifying:
Capture decisions while fresh Note deviations from plan Document verification performed Create follow-up tasks for tech debt
Your result must include explicit verification evidence. Don't just describe what you did—prove it works. See verification.md.
Commit Messages with GitHub Issues
When a task is linked to a GitHub issue (shown in dex show output), include issue references in commit messages:
Root tasks (the task itself has GitHub metadata): Use Fixes #N This closes the issue when merged Subtasks (parent/ancestor has GitHub metadata): Use Refs #N This links to the issue without closing it
Check dex show
Best Practices Right-size tasks: Completable in one focused session Clear completion criteria: Description should define "done" Don't over-decompose: 3-7 children per parent Action-oriented descriptions: Start with verbs ("Add", "Fix", "Update") Verify before completing: Tests passing, manual testing done Additional Resources cli-reference.md - Full CLI documentation examples.md - Good/bad context and result examples verification.md - Verification checklist and process hierarchies.md - Epic/task/subtask organization