212 lines
8.8 KiB
Markdown
212 lines
8.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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name: multi-agent-composition
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description: >
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This skill should be used when the user asks to "choose between skill and agent", "compose
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multi-agent system", "orchestrate agents", "manage agent context", "design component
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architecture", "should I use a skill or agent", "when to use hooks vs MCP", "build orchestrator
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workflow", needs decision frameworks for Claude Code components (skills, sub-agents, hooks, MCP
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servers, slash commands), context management patterns, or wants to build effective multi-component
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agentic systems with proper orchestration and anti-patterns guidance.
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---
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# Multi-Agent Composition
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**Master Claude Code's components, patterns, and principles** to build effective agentic systems.
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## When to Use This Knowledge
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Use this knowledge when:
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- **Learning Claude Code** - Understanding what each component does
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- **Making architectural decisions** - Choosing Skills vs Sub-Agents vs MCP vs Slash Commands
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- **Building custom solutions** - Creating specialized agents or orchestration systems
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- **Scaling agentic workflows** - Moving from single agents to multi-agent orchestration
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- **Debugging issues** - Understanding why components behave certain ways
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- **Adding observability** - Implementing hooks for monitoring and control
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## Quick Reference
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### The Core 4 Framework
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Every agent is built on these four elements:
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1. **Context** - What information does the agent have?
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2. **Model** - What capabilities does the model provide?
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3. **Prompt** - What instruction are you giving?
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4. **Tools** - What actions can the agent take?
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> "Everything comes down to just four pieces. If you understand these, you will win."
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### Component Overview
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| Component | Trigger | Use When | Best For |
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|-----------|---------|----------|----------|
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| **Skills** | Agent-invoked | Repeat problems needing management | Domain-specific workflows |
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| **Sub-Agents** | Tool-invoked | Parallelization & context isolation | Scale & batch operations |
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| **MCP Servers** | As needed | External data/services | Integration with external systems |
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| **Slash Commands** | Manual/tool | One-off tasks | Simple repeatable prompts |
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| **Hooks** | Lifecycle events | Observability & control | Monitoring & blocking |
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### Composition Hierarchy
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```text
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Skills (Top Layer)
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├─→ Can use: Sub-Agents, Slash Commands, MCP Servers, Other Skills
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└─→ Purpose: Orchestrate primitives for repeatable workflows
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Sub-Agents (Execution Layer)
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├─→ Can use: Slash Commands, Skills
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└─→ Cannot nest other Sub-Agents
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Slash Commands (Primitive Layer)
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└─→ The fundamental building block
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MCP Servers (Integration Layer)
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└─→ Connect external systems
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```
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### Golden Rules
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1. **Always start with prompts** - Master the primitive first
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2. **"Parallel" = Sub-Agents** - Nothing else supports parallel execution
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3. **External = MCP, Internal = Skills** - Clear separation of concerns
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4. **One-off = Slash Command** - Don't over-engineer
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5. **Repeat + Management = Skill** - Only scale when needed
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6. **Don't convert all slash commands to skills** - Huge mistake
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7. **Context, Model, Prompt, Tools** - Never forget the foundation
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## Documentation Structure
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This skill uses progressive disclosure. Start here, then navigate to specific topics as needed.
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### Reference Documentation
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**Architecture fundamentals** - What each component is and how they work
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- **[architecture.md](reference/architecture.md)** - Component definitions, capabilities, restrictions
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- **[core-4-framework.md](reference/core-4-framework.md)** - Deep dive into Context, Model, Prompt, Tools
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### Implementation Patterns
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**How to use components effectively** - Decision-making and implementation
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- **[decision-framework.md](patterns/decision-framework.md)** - When to use Skills vs Sub-Agents vs MCP vs Slash Commands
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- **[hooks-in-composition.md](patterns/hooks-in-composition.md)** - Implementing hooks for observability and control
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- **[orchestrator-pattern.md](patterns/orchestrator-pattern.md)** - Multi-agent orchestration at scale
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- **[context-management.md](patterns/context-management.md)** - Managing context across agents
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- **[context-in-composition.md](patterns/context-in-composition.md)** - Context handling in multi-agent systems
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### Anti-Patterns
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#### Common mistakes to avoid
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- **[common-mistakes.md](anti-patterns/common-mistakes.md)** - Converting all slash commands to
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skills, using skills for one-offs, context explosion, and more
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### Examples
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#### Real-world case studies and progression paths
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- **[progression-example.md](examples/progression-example.md)** - Evolution from prompt → sub-agent → skill (work tree manager example)
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- **[case-studies.md](examples/case-studies.md)** - Scout-builder patterns, orchestration workflows, multi-agent systems
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### Workflows
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#### Visual guides and decision trees
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- **[decision-tree.md](workflows/decision-tree.md)** - Decision trees, mindmaps, and visual guides for choosing components
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## Getting Started
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### If you're new to Claude Code
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1. Start with **[reference/architecture.md](reference/architecture.md)** to understand components
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2. Read **[reference/core-4-framework.md](reference/core-4-framework.md)** to grasp the foundation
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3. Use **[patterns/decision-framework.md](patterns/decision-framework.md)** to make your first architectural choice
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4. Check **[anti-patterns/common-mistakes.md](anti-patterns/common-mistakes.md)** to avoid pitfalls
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### If you're making an architectural decision
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1. Open **[patterns/decision-framework.md](patterns/decision-framework.md)**
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2. Follow the decision tree to identify the right component
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3. Review the specific component in **[reference/architecture.md](reference/architecture.md)**
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4. Check **[examples/](examples/)** for similar use cases
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### If you're adding observability
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1. Read **[patterns/hooks-in-composition.md](patterns/hooks-in-composition.md)** to understand available hooks and implementation
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2. Use isolated scripts pattern (UV, bun, or shell)
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### If you're scaling to multi-agent orchestration
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1. Ensure you've mastered custom agents first
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2. Read **[patterns/orchestrator-pattern.md](patterns/orchestrator-pattern.md)**
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3. Study **[examples/case-studies.md](examples/case-studies.md)**
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4. Review **[patterns/context-management.md](patterns/context-management.md)**
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## Key Principles from the Field
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### Prompts Are the Primitive
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> "Do not give away the prompt. The prompt is the fundamental unit of knowledge work and of programming. If you don't know how to build and manage prompts, you will lose."
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**Everything is prompts in the end.** Master slash commands before skills. Have a strong bias toward slash commands.
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### Skills Are Compositional, Not Replacements
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> "It is very clear this does not replace any existing feature or capability. It is a higher compositional level."
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Skills orchestrate other components; they don't replace them. Don't convert all your
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slash commands to skills—that's a huge mistake.
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### Observability is Everything
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> "When it comes to agentic coding, observability is everything. How well you can observe, iterate, and improve your agentic system is going to be a massive differentiating factor."
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If you can't measure it, you can't improve it. If you can't measure it, you can't scale it.
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### Context Window Protection
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> "200k context window is plenty. You're just stuffing a single agent with too much work. Don't force your agent to context switch."
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Create focused agents with single purposes. Delete them when done. Treat agents as temporary, deletable resources.
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### The Agentic Engineering Progression
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```text
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Level 1: Base agents → Use agents out of the box
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Level 2: Better agents → Customize prompts and workflows
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Level 3: More agents → Run multiple agents
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Level 4: Custom agents → Build specialized solutions
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Level 5: Orchestration → Manage fleets of agents
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```
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## Source Attribution
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This knowledge synthesizes:
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- Video presentations by Claude Code engineering team
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- Official Claude Code documentation (docs.claude.com)
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- Hands-on experimentation and validation
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- Multi-agent orchestration patterns from the field
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## Quick Navigation
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**Need to understand what a component is?** → [reference/architecture.md](reference/architecture.md)
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**Need to choose the right component?** → [patterns/decision-framework.md](patterns/decision-framework.md)
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**Need to implement hooks?** → [patterns/hooks-in-composition.md](patterns/hooks-in-composition.md)
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**Need to scale to multiple agents?** → [patterns/orchestrator-pattern.md](patterns/orchestrator-pattern.md)
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**Need to see real examples?** → [examples/](examples/)
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**Need visual guides?** → [workflows/decision-tree.md](workflows/decision-tree.md)
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**Want to avoid mistakes?** → [anti-patterns/common-mistakes.md](anti-patterns/common-mistakes.md)
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---
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**Remember:** Context, Model, Prompt, Tools. Master these four, and you master Claude Code.
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