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ivangdavila

Decide

by Iván · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.1 · MIT-0
linuxdarwinwin32 ✓ Security Clean
2478
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Install in OpenClaw
/install decide
Description
Self-learn your decision patterns to safely build its own decision-making over time.
README (SKILL.md)

Architecture

Decision state lives in ~/decide/. If that folder is missing or empty, run setup.md.

~/decide/
├── memory.md        # Durable decision rules, approval boundaries, and confirmed defaults
├── decisions.md     # Major decisions with question, components, chosen option, and outcome
└── domains/         # Domain-specific decision components, overrides, and exceptions

When to Use

Use when the agent faces a consequential choice that can change architecture, workflow, cost, publish behavior, vendor selection, or long-term project direction.

This skill is for branching decisions, not for generic preferences or execution lessons. It should stay compatible with self-improving: self-improving learns how to work better, while decide learns how to choose safely when the choice has lasting consequences.

Quick Reference

Topic File
Setup guide setup.md
Memory template memory-template.md
Migration guide migration.md
Decision components components.md
Confidence calibration confidence.md
Exceptions and always-ask cases exceptions.md

Use those files as a decision safety stack: first know the structure, then calibrate confidence, then verify exceptions before reusing any past choice.

Decision Workflow

  1. Frame the decision as a real question, not as a vague feeling.
  2. Gather the components that materially affect the answer.
  3. Read ~/decide/memory.md, then the smallest relevant file in ~/decide/domains/, then check ~/decide/decisions.md for a materially similar record.
  4. Reuse a past choice only if the question, the key components, and the exception boundaries still line up.
  5. If anything important is missing or changed, ask first and log the answer once the human decides.

Core Rules

1. Default Conservative on Consequential Choices

  • Frameworks, architectures, migrations, vendors, publish paths, spending, and irreversible branches should default to asking the human.
  • Safer failure means asking one question too many, not silently picking the wrong branch.
  • A recommendation is good; an unvalidated autonomous choice is not.

2. A Decision Requires Components, Not Vibes

  • Every major decision should be framed as a question plus the components that materially affect the answer.
  • Components can include product surface, client type, reversibility, budget, timeline, team size, project constraints, and long-term maintenance cost.
  • If the needed components are missing, the decision is not ready for autonomy.

3. Reuse Only When the Context Materially Matches

  • A stored rule is reusable only when the question and the key components match closely enough to make the same choice still rational.
  • Matching one signal is not enough. "Same framework choice" is weak if client, surface, constraints, or risk changed.
  • If there is any serious mismatch, ask first.
  • Exceptions beat defaults. A confirmed default is still invalid when a domain override or high-stakes exception changes the branch.

4. Promote Patterns Only After Human Confirmation

  • Repeatedly seeing the same decision in the same context makes a candidate rule, not an autonomous permission.
  • After enough similar decisions, ask: "When this is true plus this plus this, should I default to X?"
  • Only promote the pattern after explicit confirmation.

5. Log the Full Decision, Not Just the Outcome

  • Store the question, components, chosen option, rationale, confidence, and outcome.
  • A naked note like "use React Native" is too weak; it must say when and why.
  • Good logs prevent false autonomy later.

6. Keep Workspace Routing Non-Destructive

  • Use setup to add small AGENTS and SOUL snippets that force decision retrieval before major choices.
  • Show the exact snippet and wait for explicit approval before writing any workspace file.
  • The routing must make it hard to skip the decision log when a consequential branch appears.

7. Never Let Decision Memory Shadow Other Skills

  • Use self-improving for execution quality, corrections, and reusable work habits.
  • Use escalate for ask-vs-act boundaries across actions broadly.
  • Use decide only for major branching choices where the structure of the context determines the answer.

Common Traps

These failures usually come from pattern-matching too early or from collapsing a major decision into a shallow preference.

Trap Why It Fails Better Move
Reusing a rule because the question sounds similar Important components may have changed Compare question plus key components before reusing
Treating one-off emergency choices as defaults Stress decisions rarely generalize well Log them, but keep them unconfirmed unless repeated
Autodeciding after reading only memory.md Exceptions and domain overrides get missed List domains, read the smallest relevant override, then check decisions
Turning execution preferences into decision rules Blurs compatibility with self-improving Keep major branching choices in decide, workflow lessons elsewhere
Applying a framework or vendor rule across clients blindly Client and surface often change the optimal answer Ask again when client, platform, scope, or constraints differ

Data Storage

Local state lives in ~/decide/:

  • durable decision rules, approval boundaries, and confirmed defaults in ~/decide/memory.md
  • major decision records in ~/decide/decisions.md
  • domain-specific component models, overrides, and exceptions in ~/decide/domains/

The packaged guides components.md, confidence.md, and exceptions.md stay in the skill itself and act as references, not as the user's live memory.

Security & Privacy

  • This skill stores local decision notes in ~/decide/.
  • It may read workspace steering files such as the AGENTS file and SOUL file so that decision retrieval happens before major choices.
  • It may suggest small non-destructive edits to those files during setup, but it must show the snippet and wait for explicit approval before any write.
  • It should prefer asking to guessing whenever a decision can affect money, production, publishing, deletion, contracts, or long-term architecture.
  • It never modifies its own SKILL.md.

Related Skills

Install with clawhub install \x3Cslug> if user confirms:

  • escalate - Control broad ask-vs-act boundaries around risky actions
  • self-improving - Learn execution lessons without conflating them with decision rules
  • memory - Keep broader long-term context and user continuity
  • proactivity - Push the next step while respecting confirmed decision defaults

Feedback

  • If useful: clawhub star decide
  • Stay updated: clawhub sync
Usage Guidance
This skill is internally consistent and appears to do what it says: it stores decision rules and logs in ~/decide/ and includes conservative rules (ask-first, explicit promotion of defaults). Before installing, review the provided setup and SOUL/AGENTS snippets so you know exactly what will be written to your workspace. Back up any existing ~/decide/ data you care about. Confirm that you are comfortable with the agent reading and appending those local files, and only approve the skill to write AGENTS or SOUL files after inspecting the exact snippet it will add. If you want stricter control, deny autonomous writes or require explicit user approval in your agent policy.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: decide Version: 1.0.1 The 'Decide' skill is a decision-logging framework designed to help an AI agent maintain consistency by recording and retrieving past user choices. It operates by managing local state in '~/decide/' and suggests non-destructive integration snippets for workspace configuration files (AGENTS and SOUL), explicitly requiring user approval before any writes. The instructions in SKILL.md and setup.md prioritize safety, mandating 'Always Ask' protocols for high-stakes actions like spending, publishing, and architectural changes, and show no signs of data exfiltration, obfuscation, or unauthorized command execution.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description match the required capabilities: local durable decision memory in ~/decide/ is reasonable for a 'decide' skill. No unrelated binaries, cloud credentials, or network endpoints are requested.
Instruction Scope
The runtime instructions direct the agent to read and write files under the user's home (~ /decide/) and to list domain files (find). That file I/O is consistent with the stated purpose, but users should note the skill will create and append to local files when run (the files and exact snippets are in the repo and the skill instructs to seek explicit approval before modifying workspace SOUL/AGENTS files).
Install Mechanism
Instruction-only skill with no install spec and no external downloads; nothing will be written to disk by an installer beyond what the agent is told to create in ~/decide/.
Credentials
Requires no environment variables or credentials and explicitly warns not to persist secrets. The requested access (home-directory files) is proportional to the skill's purpose.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill persists state under ~/decide/ (creates files and suggests adding small AGENTS/SOUL snippets). It is not always-enabled and does not request elevated privileges, but it does instruct the agent to write local files — the user should review any snippets before allowing writes. Autonomous invocation is allowed by platform default (not raised here), so ensure agent policies govern file writes if you want stricter controls.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install decide
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /decide
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.1
Adds structured decision logging, safer setup, and stricter context matching before autonomous choices.
v1.0.0
Initial release
Metadata
Slug decide
Version 1.0.1
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 22
Active Installs 21
Total Versions 2
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Decide?

Self-learn your decision patterns to safely build its own decision-making over time. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 2478 downloads so far.

How do I install Decide?

Run "/install decide" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Decide free?

Yes, Decide is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Decide support?

Decide is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (linux, darwin, win32).

Who created Decide?

It is built and maintained by Iván (@ivangdavila); the current version is v1.0.1.

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