Share Plan
Format an implementation plan into a GitHub issue using collapsible <details><summary> sections. The issue stays scannable at a glance while preserving full implementation depth for whoever picks it up.
Arguments
code
$ARGUMENTS
Instructions
1. Identify the Plan
Find the implementation plan from one of these sources (in priority order):
- •Explicit file path in arguments -- read it directly
- •Conversation context -- extract from the current session's discussion
If no plan is found, stop and tell the user.
2. Determine Target
- •
#NNNin arguments -- update that existing issue - •
newin arguments -- create a new issue (derive title from plan context or remaining args) - •Neither -- ask whether to update an existing issue or create a new one
For existing issues: fetch the body with gh issue view NNN --json body,title. Preserve the Problem and Goal sections if they exist -- only add/replace implementation sections.
4. Format the Issue Body
Structure the updated issue body using this template:
markdown
## Problem [Keep existing or write from plan context] ## Goal [Keep existing or write from plan context] ## Approach [High-level summary: 3-5 bullets max. What technology/pattern, why this approach, key design decisions. This is the only section most readers will read.] ## Files to Create/Modify | File | Action | Purpose | |------|--------|---------| | `path/to/file` | Create/Edit | One-line purpose | ## Implementation <details> <summary>[Component or step name]</summary> [Full implementation detail -- logic, pseudocode, config snippets, etc.] </details> <details> <summary>[Another component]</summary> [Details...] </details> <details> <summary>Edge cases</summary> [Known edge cases, limitations, things to verify during implementation] </details> ## Notes [Cross-references to related issues, links to plan files, etc. Optional.]
Formatting rules:
- •Every
<details>block needs a blank line after<summary>and before</details>for GitHub rendering - •Keep the Approach section above the fold -- no
<details>wrapper - •Put code snippets, config examples, and step-by-step logic inside
<details> - •Use the Files table as a quick-reference index
- •Group implementation details by component, not by step number
- •Edge cases always get their own
<details>block
5. Publish
Commands will prompt for approval since they're not in allowed-tools.
Update existing issue:
bash
gh issue edit NNN --body "$(cat <<'EOF' ...formatted body... EOF )"
Create new issue:
bash
gh issue create --title "TITLE" --body "$(cat <<'EOF' ...formatted body... EOF )"
Examples
code
/share-plan #108 -> Format current plan into issue 108 /share-plan #108 from path/to/plan.md -> Use specific plan file /share-plan new tmux session naming -> Create new issue with plan from conversation /share-plan -> Ask for target, use conversation context
Anti-patterns
- •Dumping raw plan prose without collapsible sections
- •Hiding the approach summary inside a
<details>block - •Overwriting Problem/Goal sections the user already wrote
- •Creating a wall of text with no scannable structure
- •Putting every sentence in its own
<details>block (group by component)