Creating Orchestration Workflows
I'll help you create powerful orchestration workflows that coordinate multiple Claude Code agents. I use Socratic questioning to understand your needs and generate optimal workflow syntax.
When I Activate
I automatically activate when you:
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Describe a multi-step process you want to automate
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Mention "workflow", "orchestration", "automate", "coordinate agents"
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Ask "how do I create a workflow?"
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Want to connect multiple agents or tasks
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Ask about automating repetitive processes
My Process
- Understanding Your Intent
CRITICAL: I use AskUserQuestion tool for ALL questions. NO plain text numbered lists.
I'll ask strategic questions to understand:
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What problem you're solving
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What your goal is
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What scope you have in mind
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What external data sources you need (APIs, web scraping, databases)
- Detecting Temp Script Needs
I automatically scan for these triggers:
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External APIs: Reddit, Twitter, GitHub, ProductHunt, etc.
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Web Scraping: Extracting data from websites
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Data Processing: Analyzing 10+ items, statistical analysis
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Authentication: Any service requiring API keys
If detected → I'll proactively create temp scripts for you
- Identifying the Pattern
I'll determine if your workflow is:
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Sequential: One step after another (-> )
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Parallel: Multiple tasks at once (|| )
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Conditional: Based on results (~> )
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Hybrid: Combination of above
- Designing the Workflow
I'll help you define:
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Which agents to use (built-in or custom)
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How data flows between steps
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Error handling strategy
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Review checkpoints
- Generating Syntax
I'll create clean, readable workflow syntax like:
Simple sequential workflow
explore:"Analyze codebase" -> implement:"Add feature" -> test:"Run tests"
Parallel with merge
[security-check || style-check || performance-check] -> general-purpose:"Consolidate findings"
Question Approach
For more details on my questioning strategy, see socratic-method.md.
Quick overview:
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Vague requests: I ask about problem → scope → constraints
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Specific requests: I confirm pattern → ask about customization
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Medium requests: I explore scope → clarify details
Common Patterns
I have templates for common scenarios. See patterns.md for complete catalog.
Popular patterns:
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Feature implementation (explore → implement → test → review)
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Bug fixing (investigate → fix → verify)
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Security scanning (scan → review → fix → verify)
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Documentation (analyze → write → review)
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Refactoring (analyze → refactor → test → validate)
Custom Agents
When your workflow needs specialized expertise, I can create temp agents for you.
Temp agents are:
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Created automatically during workflow design
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Saved in ./temp-agents/ directory (in current working directory)
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Cleaned after workflow design (with user confirmation)
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Can be promoted to permanent agents if useful
When I create temp agents:
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You need domain-specific expertise (e.g., security scanner)
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Task requires specific output formats
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Multiple workflows might benefit (I'll suggest making it permanent)
See temp-agents.md for examples and guidelines.
Credential Security (CRITICAL)
When workflows require API credentials or sensitive data, I follow strict security practices:
Security Checklist
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Never hardcode credentials in workflow files
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Use config files for credentials (e.g., config/reddit-credentials.json )
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Provide example files (e.g., config/reddit-credentials.json.example )
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Verify .gitignore includes credential files before workflow runs
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Check git status to ensure credentials aren't staged
Required Workflow Phase
For workflows requiring credentials, I add a Phase 0: Security Verification step:
Phase 0: Security & Credential Verification
general-purpose:"SECURITY CHECK - Verify credentials are properly configured.
- Check if credentials file exists
- Verify .gitignore includes the credentials file
- Check git status for accidental staging
- Abort if credentials might be committed
If NOT protected:
- WARN user
- Offer to add to .gitignore
- Only proceed after confirmation":credentials_status
.gitignore Patterns
These patterns MUST be in .gitignore:
API credentials - NEVER commit
config/-credentials.json config/credentials.json **/credentials.json **/secrets.json *.credentials.json .env .env.local
User Notification
When I detect a workflow needs credentials, I:
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Ask user if they have credentials set up
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Provide setup instructions with example file
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Verify .gitignore protection
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Add security verification phase to workflow
Temp Scripts (CRITICAL)
Temp scripts are Python/Node.js scripts I create for tasks that Claude Code tools can't handle directly.
When I Create Temp Scripts
I automatically create temp scripts when you need:
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External API calls - Reddit, Twitter, GitHub, ProductHunt
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Web scraping - Extracting data from websites
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Data processing - Pandas analysis, JSON parsing at scale
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Database queries - SQL, NoSQL operations
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Batch operations - Processing 10+ files
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Third-party libraries - NumPy, BeautifulSoup, requests
How It Works
You say: "Fetch 10 Reddit posts about startups"
I create:
general-purpose:"Create Python script using PRAW library:
- Authenticate with Reddit API (client_id, client_secret)
- Fetch 10 hot posts from r/startups
- Extract: title, url, score, selftext
- Return JSON array
- Save as ./temp-scripts/reddit_fetcher.py
- Execute and return results":reddit_posts
Proactive Detection
I scan your request for keywords:
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"API", "fetch", "scrape", "get data from"
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"Reddit", "Twitter", "ProductHunt", "GitHub"
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"analyze", "process", "calculate"
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Numbers like "10 posts", "100 records"
If found → I'll suggest temp scripts and ask for your confirmation
When Uncertain
If I'm not sure whether you need a temp script, I'll ask:
AskUserQuestion({ questions: [{ question: "How should I handle this data processing?", header: "Approach", multiSelect: false, options: [ {label: "Built-in tools", description: "Use Read/Grep for simple operations"}, {label: "Create temp script", description: "Python script for complex processing"}, {label: "External API", description: "Fetch from service with authentication"} ] }] })
For complete guide, see: docs/TEMP-SCRIPTS-DETECTION-GUIDE.md
Custom Syntax
Sometimes you need syntax beyond the basics. I can design custom syntax elements like:
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New operators (=> for merge-with-dedup)
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Checkpoints (@security-gate )
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Conditions (if security-critical )
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Loops (retry-with-backoff )
I follow a reuse-first approach: I check existing syntax before creating new.
See custom-syntax.md for syntax design process.
Examples
Real workflow examples to inspire you:
See examples.md for complete catalog with explanations.
Quick examples:
TDD Implementation:
Test-Driven Development workflow
general-purpose:"Write failing test":test_file ->
implement:"Make test pass":implementation ->
code-reviewer:"Review {implementation}":review ->
(if review.approved)~> commit:"Commit changes" >
(if review.needs_changes)> implement:"Fix issues"
Bug Investigation:
Parallel investigation with consolidation
[ explore:"Find related code":related_files || general-purpose:"Search for similar bugs":similar_issues || general-purpose:"Check recent changes":recent_commits ] -> general-purpose:"Consolidate findings into root cause analysis":analysis -> implement:"Fix bug based on {analysis}":fix -> general-purpose:"Run relevant tests":test_results
Security Audit:
Security scanning with manual gate
$security-scanner:"Scan codebase for vulnerabilities":findings -> @security-review:"Review {findings}. Approve if no critical issues." -> (if approved)~> deploy:"Deploy to production"
Workflow Templates
After creating your workflow, I'll offer to save it as a template for reuse.
Templates include:
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Descriptive name and metadata
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Parameter placeholders for customization
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Complete workflow syntax
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Usage instructions
Templates are saved in ./examples/ directory as .flow files.
What Happens Next
After I create your workflow:
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Review: I show you the generated syntax with explanation
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Customize: You can ask for modifications
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Save: I offer to save as template
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Execute: Use /orchestration:run to execute it
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Cleanup: Check for temp files and ask about deletion
Cleanup After Workflow Design (MANDATORY)
After completing workflow design, check for temporary files and ask user before deleting.
Step 1: Detect Temporary Files
Check for existence of temporary files in the current working directory:
Check temp-agents created during design
TEMP_AGENTS=$(ls ./temp-agents/*.md 2>/dev/null | wc -l)
Check temp-scripts created during design
TEMP_SCRIPTS=$(ls ./temp-scripts/* 2>/dev/null | wc -l)
TOTAL=$((TEMP_AGENTS + TEMP_SCRIPTS))
Step 2: If Files Exist, Ask User
Only if TOTAL > 0 , use AskUserQuestion:
AskUserQuestion({ questions: [{ question: "Found ${TOTAL} temporary files created during workflow design. Do you want to delete them?", header: "Cleanup", multiSelect: false, options: [ {label: "Yes, delete all", description: "Remove temp-agents and temp-scripts"}, {label: "Show me first", description: "List files before deciding"}, {label: "No, keep them", description: "Leave files for workflow execution"} ] }] })
Step 3: Execute Cleanup if Confirmed
If user chose "Yes, delete all":
Delete temp-agents (in current working directory)
rm -f ./temp-agents/*.md
Delete temp-scripts (in current working directory)
rm -rf ./temp-scripts/*
Report what was deleted:
Cleaned up ${TOTAL} temporary files:
- ${TEMP_AGENTS} temp agents removed
- ${TEMP_SCRIPTS} temp scripts removed
Step 4: Skip if No Files
If TOTAL == 0 , skip cleanup silently (don't bother user).
Tips for Best Results
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Be specific: More details = better workflow
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Ask questions: I'm here to help refine your ideas
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Start simple: We can add complexity later
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Review examples: Check examples.md for inspiration
Technical Details
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Namespace: All plugin agents use orchestration: prefix
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Temp agents: Auto-prefixed with orchestration:
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Variable binding: Use :variable_name to capture outputs
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Error handling: Use (if failed)~> for error branches
For complete syntax reference, see executing-workflows skill or syntax reference.
Related Skills
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executing-workflows: Run workflows with visualization and steering
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managing-agents: Create and manage custom agents
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designing-syntax: Design custom syntax elements
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using-templates: Use and customize workflow templates
Ready to create a workflow? Just describe what you want to automate!