Structured, standards-aware development workflows for Claude Code
Describe what you want to build, and the plugin handles the rest - from specification through implementation to verification - while enforcing your project's coding standards at every step.
- Guided workflows for features, bug fixes, enhancements, performance, migrations, research, and product design
- Auto-discovered standards from your codebase - config files, source patterns, and documentation are analyzed and enforced throughout every workflow
- Test-driven implementation with automated planning, incremental verification, and full test suite runs before completion
- Pause and resume any workflow - state is preserved across sessions
- Production readiness checks including code review, reality assessment, and pragmatic over-engineering detection
- Claude Code CLI installed and configured
/plugin marketplace add SkillPanel/maister
/plugin install maister@maister-pluginsAfter installing, restart Claude Code (/exit and relaunch) to ensure the plugin is fully loaded.
Initialize your project to auto-detect coding standards and generate project documentation:
/maister:initThis scans your codebase and creates .maister/ with standards, docs, and task folders. May take a few minutes on larger projects.
If you have another project already using Maister, you can reuse its standards as a starting point:
/maister:init --standards-from=/path/to/other-project/maister:development Add user profile page with avatar uploadOr just discuss your task with Claude and then run:
/maister:developmentThe plugin picks up context from your conversation - no arguments needed.
- You describe a task - either as an argument or just in conversation
- The plugin classifies it (feature, bug, enhancement, etc.) and proposes a workflow
- You confirm, and it guides you through phases: requirements → spec → plan → implement → verify
- At each phase, it asks for your input and decisions
- You get tested, verified code with a detailed work log
All artifacts are saved in .maister/tasks/ organized by type and date.
Every workflow command works without arguments. The plugin reads your current conversation to extract the task description and auto-detect the task type:
You: "The login page throws a 500 error when the session expires"
You: /maister:development
→ Auto-detects: bug fix, extracts description from conversation
You: /maister:standards-update
→ Scans conversation for patterns like "we always use..." or "prefer X over Y"
You can always be explicit when you prefer - arguments and flags simply override the auto-detection.
| Command | Use When |
|---|---|
/maister:development |
Features, bug fixes, enhancements |
/maister:research |
Research with synthesis and solution design |
/maister:performance |
Optimizing speed or resource usage |
/maister:migration |
Changing technologies or patterns |
/maister:product-design |
Product and feature design |
Task type (feature/bug/enhancement) is auto-detected from context. Override with --type=feature|bug|enhancement if needed. Or use /maister:work as a single entry point that routes to the right workflow.
For smaller tasks that don't need a full workflow:
| Command | Use When |
|---|---|
/maister:quick-plan |
You want a plan with standards awareness before coding |
/maister:quick-dev |
You know what to do - just implement with standards applied |
/maister:quick-bugfix |
Quick TDD-driven bug fix — write failing test, fix, verify |
This is the key differentiator. Maister doesn't just run workflows - it learns your project's conventions and enforces them:
/maister:initscans config files, source code, and documentation to auto-detect your coding standards- Continuous checking - standards are consulted before specification, during planning, and while coding (not just at the start)
/maister:standards-discoverrefreshes standards from your evolving codebase/maister:standards-updatelets you add or refine standards manually, or sync from another project with--from=PATH
Standards live in .maister/docs/standards/ and are indexed in .maister/docs/INDEX.md.
Important: Run workflows with auto-accept edits enabled. Do not use Claude Code's plan mode with workflows (see Best Practices below).
Want to try experimental features before they hit stable? Install from the beta channel:
# Add the beta marketplace
/plugin marketplace add SkillPanel/Maister#beta
# Install the beta plugin
/plugin install maister@maister-plugins-betaIf you already have the stable version installed, uninstall it first to avoid conflicts:
/plugin uninstall maister@maister-pluginsTo switch back to stable:
/plugin uninstall maister@maister-plugins-beta
/plugin install maister@maister-pluginsBeta versions may contain features that are not yet fully tested. Use at your own discretion.
Don't use plan mode when starting a workflow. Planning is a built-in part of every workflow — the orchestrator creates specs, plans, and other files as it goes. Claude Code's plan mode restricts file creation, which conflicts with this. Let the workflow handle planning on its own.
Start workflows in a fresh session. This is especially useful when chaining workflows (e.g., research → development). Research and product-design artifacts already contain all the context needed, so a clean session avoids noise from prior conversation.
Chain workflows by passing a task folder. If you've completed a research or product-design workflow and want to build on those results, pass the task folder directly:
/maister:development .maister/tasks/research/2026-01-12-oauth-researchYou can also append additional instructions to narrow scope or guide the workflow:
/maister:development .maister/tasks/product-design/2026-03-10-dashboard-redesign Implement only phase 1Orchestrator may stall after long phases. After context compaction (which typically happens after lengthy phases like implementation), the main agent may stop progressing automatically. If you notice it's idle, just type something like "continue" or "proceed" — it will pick up where it left off. You can also re-invoke the workflow in resume mode to reload the orchestrator state:
/maister:development .maister/tasks/development/2026-03-24-my-feature- Workflow Details - phases, examples, and task structure for each workflow type
- Full Command Reference - all workflow, review, utility, and quick commands