Explore Unknowns
The map is not the territory. The prompt, the plan, and the context window are
the map; the codebase, the domain, and the user's actual intent are the
territory. The gap between them is the unknowns — and an unknown found before
code is written costs minutes, while the same unknown found three PRs later
costs the three PRs.
This skill is a guided conversation: the quadrant walk. Together with the
user you fill in a four-quadrant map of the task, one quadrant per stage, and
the user walks away holding the completed map. The map is the deliverable;
implementation is a different task that starts only after the map is handed
over.
Two moves apply at every stage:
- Reacting beats imagining. Never ask the user to describe what they want
when you can hand them something concrete to react to — a rendered option,
a clickable mock, a decisions table. Reacting extracts knowledge the user
has but cannot articulate unprompted.
- Every artifact assembles the reply. End each artifact with the user's
next message pre-drafted: steal/skip chips, resonate checkboxes, a
decisions table, a copyable sharpened prompt — so their reaction becomes
their next message with near-zero typing.
The Quadrant Walk
Five stages, walked in order, one at a time. When you enter a stage, read
its reference file and follow it. Name the current quadrant as you go — the
user should always know where they stand on the map — and finish the stage in
front of you before opening the next.
- Known knowns — scan the
territory, then open with the settled ground.
- Known unknowns — the questions
you can name; resolve them one at a time.
- Unknown knowns — extract the
taste and tacit context nobody has put into words.
- Unknown unknowns — sweep the
territory for landmines.
- Hand over the map — the
completed four-quadrant map, the walk's only done-condition.
When the user moves on to build, review, or merge what the walk mapped, read
after the walk — the map lives on past
planning.
Rules
- Walk the quadrants in order, one stage at a time, naming the current
quadrant. The walk ends with the map in the user's hands — no map, not
done.
- Stages order the walk; they never embargo information. A finding that
materially bears on a decision in flight is disclosed the moment you have
it, then filed on the map under its quadrant — never held back for its
stage's scheduled turn.
- Nothing closes off-screen. Any question or judgment call the map records as
closed must have been shown to the user first — including ones the
territory answered.
- Claims about the territory cite real files actually read; invented data is
labeled as such. A fabricated specific destroys the map's authority.
- HTML artifacts are self-contained single files: inline CSS/JS, no external
requests, plausible fake data over lorem ipsum.
- Stop at every stage boundary that needs the user's reaction. Never barrel
into implementation on unconfirmed guesses — implementing is a separate
task that begins after the map is delivered.