specstory-yak

安装量: 89
排名: #8979

安装

npx skills add https://github.com/specstoryai/agent-skills --skill specstory-yak

Analyzes your .specstory/history to detect when coding sessions drifted off track from their original goal. Produces a "yak shave score" for each session.

How It Works

  • Parses specstory history files from a date range (or all recent sessions)

  • Extracts the initial user intent from the first message

  • Tracks domain shifts: file references, tool call patterns, goal changes

  • Scores each session from 0 (laser focused) to 100 (maximum yak shave)

  • Summarizes your worst offenders and patterns

What Is Yak Shaving?

"I need to deploy my app, but first I need to fix CI, but first I need to update Node, but first I need to fix my shell config..."

Yak shaving is when you start with Goal A but end up deep in unrelated Task Z. This skill detects that pattern in your AI coding sessions.

Usage

Slash Command

When invoked via /specstory-yak, interpret the user's natural language:

| /specstory-yak | --days 7 (default)

| /specstory-yak last 30 days | --days 30

| /specstory-yak this week | --days 7

| /specstory-yak top 10 | --top 10

| /specstory-yak january | --from 2026-01-01 --to 2026-01-31

| /specstory-yak from jan 15 to jan 20 | --from 2026-01-15 --to 2026-01-20

| /specstory-yak by modification time | --by-mtime

| /specstory-yak last 14 days as json | --days 14 --json

| /specstory-yak save to yak-report.md | -o yak-report.md

| /specstory-yak last 90 days output to report | --days 90 -o report.md

Direct Script Usage

python /path/to/skills/specstory-yak/scripts/analyze.py [options]

Arguments:

  • --days N - Analyze last N days (default: 7)

  • --from DATE - Start date (YYYY-MM-DD)

  • --to DATE - End date (YYYY-MM-DD)

  • --path PATH - Path to .specstory/history (auto-detects if not specified)

  • --top N - Show top N worst yak shaves (default: 5)

  • --json - Output as JSON

  • --verbose - Show detailed analysis

  • --by-mtime - Filter by file modification time instead of filename date

  • -o, --output FILE - Write report to file (auto-adds .md or .json extension)

Examples:

# Analyze last 7 days
python scripts/analyze.py

# Analyze last 30 days, show top 10
python scripts/analyze.py --days 30 --top 10

# Analyze specific date range
python scripts/analyze.py --from 2026-01-01 --to 2026-01-28

# Filter by when files were modified (not session start time)
python scripts/analyze.py --days 7 --by-mtime

# JSON output for further processing
python scripts/analyze.py --days 14 --json

# Save report to a markdown file
python scripts/analyze.py --days 90 -o yak-report.md

# Save JSON to a file
python scripts/analyze.py --days 30 --json -o yak-data.json

Output

Yak Shave Report (2026-01-21 to 2026-01-28)
==========================================

Sessions analyzed: 23
Average yak shave score: 34/100

Top Yak Shaves:
---------------
1. [87/100] "fix button alignment" (2026-01-25)
   Started: CSS fix for button
   Ended up: Rewriting entire build system
   Domain shifts: 4 (ui -> build -> docker -> k8s)

2. [72/100] "add logout feature" (2026-01-23)
   Started: Add logout button
   Ended up: Refactoring auth system + session management
   Domain shifts: 3 (ui -> auth -> database)

3. [65/100] "update readme" (2026-01-22)
   Started: Documentation update
   Ended up: CI pipeline overhaul
   Domain shifts: 2 (docs -> ci -> testing)

Most Focused Sessions:
----------------------
1. [5/100] "explain auth flow" (2026-01-26) - Pure analysis, no drift
2. [8/100] "fix typo in config" (2026-01-24) - Quick surgical fix

Patterns Detected:
------------------
- You yak shave most on: UI tasks (avg 58/100)
- Safest task type: Code review/explanation (avg 12/100)
- Peak yak shave hours: 11pm-2am (avg 71/100)

Scoring Methodology

The yak shave score (0-100) is computed from:

| Domain shifts | 40% | How many times file references jumped domains

| Goal completion | 25% | Did the original stated goal get completed?

| Session length ratio | 20% | Length vs. complexity of original ask

| Tool type cascade | 15% | Read->Search->Edit->Create->Deploy escalation

Score interpretation:

  • 0-20: Laser focused

  • 21-40: Minor tangents

  • 41-60: Moderate drift

  • 61-80: Significant yak shaving

  • 81-100: Epic rabbit hole

Present Results to User

IMPORTANT: After running the analyzer script, you MUST add a personalized LLM-generated summary at the very top of your response, BEFORE showing the raw report output.

LLM Summary Guidelines

Generate a 3-5 sentence personalized commentary that:

  • Opens with a verdict - A witty one-liner about the overall state (e.g., "Your coding sessions this week were... an adventure." or "Remarkably disciplined! Someone's been taking their focus vitamins.")

  • Calls out the highlight - Reference the most notable session specifically:

If high yak shave: "That January 25th button fix that somehow became a Kubernetes migration? Chef's kiss of scope creep."

  • If low yak shave: "Your January 26th auth flow explanation was surgical - in and out, no detours."

  • Identifies a pattern - Note any recurring theme:

"You seem to yak shave most when starting with UI tasks"

  • "Late night sessions are your danger zone"

  • "Your refactoring sessions tend to stay focused"

  • Ends with actionable advice or a joke - Either:

A practical tip: "Consider time-boxing those 'quick CSS fixes' - they have a 73% yak shave rate"

  • Or a joke: "At this rate, your next typo fix will result in a complete rewrite of the Linux kernel"

Example LLM Summary

## 🐃 Your Yak Shave Analysis

Well, well, well. You came to fix buttons and left having rewritten half the
infrastructure. Your average yak shave score of 47/100 puts you firmly in
"classic developer behavior" territory.

The standout? That January 25th session where a CSS alignment fix somehow
evolved into a full Kubernetes deployment overhaul. Four domain shifts later,
you probably forgot what a button even looks like.

Pattern I noticed: Your UI tasks have a 58% higher yak shave rate than your
code review sessions. Maybe start labeling those "quick UI fixes" as
"potential 3-hour adventures" in your calendar.

Here's the full breakdown:

Then show the raw report output below your summary.

What to Highlight

After your summary, when presenting the raw results:

  • The worst offenders with before/after comparison

  • Patterns in when/what causes yak shaving

  • Actionable insight - what task types to watch out for

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