# Project Profile Workbook Fill out this workbook once before deployment when you want the suite to ship with pre-staged defaults for build, tools, environment, workflow, and quality preferences. This version has been completed and should act as the human-readable source behind [DEPLOYMENT-PROFILE.md](./DEPLOYMENT-PROFILE.md). ## How To Use This Workbook - Keep answers concise and specific. - Prefer durable defaults over task-specific preferences. - If a question does not matter for your projects, write `No strong preference`. - If your answer depends on project type, note the default and the main exception. - Treat this workbook as the source for pre-deployment staging, not a runtime questionnaire. ## Global Defaults ### 1. What repository types should this suite optimize for by default? Answer: Full-stack web apps. ### 2. What operating systems, shells, and local environments should the agent assume first? Answer: Windows and PowerShell for local development. Keep Linux, Docker, and Unraid deployment realities in mind. ### 3. What package managers, build tools, and task runners should the agent prefer when multiple options exist? Answer: Compatibility-first defaults and standard stack tooling. ### 4. Which languages, runtimes, or frameworks should get first-class preference across deployments? Answer: Node and TypeScript first for application work, with Python acceptable for tooling and automation. ### 5. What is your default testing philosophy before considering work complete? Answer: Run the most relevant local tests for the changed area by default, and broaden verification for risky changes. ### 6. How cautious should the agent be about asking questions versus making reasonable assumptions? Answer: Ask-first when product intent or change risk is unclear. ### 7. What documentation should usually be updated when behavior, setup, or workflows change? Answer: Readmes, Unraid install docs, roadmaps, and shipped summaries are all important and should usually be updated when changes matter. ### 8. What UX and polish bar should the suite assume for user-facing changes? Answer: High polish by default. ### 9. What release, rollout, and communication expectations should be standard? Answer: Provide a concise change summary by default and note rollout or migration impact when relevant. ### 10. What kinds of risk should the suite optimize hardest against? Answer: Regressions and broken behavior. ## Software Development Defaults ### 1. What architecture style or system design bias should be the default? Answer: Favor modular boundaries and cleaner separation early. ### 2. How should the suite balance frontend, backend, and full-stack execution by default? Answer: Full-stack by default. ### 3. Which frameworks, libraries, or implementation patterns should be preferred first? Answer: Prefer mainstream modern patterns for the stack. ### 4. What database and persistence assumptions should the agent make? Answer: Relational database first. ### 5. How conservative should migration and schema-change work be? Answer: Be careful, but do not overengineer small schema changes. ### 6. What dependency upgrade strategy should be assumed? Answer: Prefer small, safe, frequent upgrades with focused validation. ### 7. What performance bar should the suite assume by default? Answer: Be proactive about performance on critical paths. ### 8. What minimum security baseline should be applied to code changes? Answer: Basic secure defaults only: validate input, handle secrets safely, and respect auth boundaries. ### 9. What observability and operability expectations should be normal? Answer: Good operational hygiene with meaningful logs and diagnostics for important paths. ### 10. How aggressive should the agent be about refactoring and technical debt reduction while doing feature work? Answer: Use feature work as an opportunity to improve surrounding structure meaningfully when it helps the change. ## Debugging Defaults ### 1. Should debugging start with reproduction first, code inspection first, or whichever is fastest to verify? Answer: Use whichever path gives the fastest trustworthy signal. ### 2. What logs, traces, or diagnostics should the agent expect to consult before guessing? Answer: Lean on logs and traces first. ### 3. How should the agent behave during live or user-impacting incidents? Answer: Stabilize first, then diagnose more deeply. ### 4. What is the preferred rollback, mitigation, or feature-flag strategy when risk is high? Answer: Prefer reversible mitigations such as flags, rollbacks, or partial disablement. ### 5. How strongly should the agent try to add or update tests when fixing bugs? Answer: Add tests for higher-risk or recurring bugs. ### 6. What level of root-cause explanation should be standard after a fix? Answer: Clearly explain cause, symptom, and why the fix works. ### 7. What tradeoffs are acceptable when stabilizing an issue quickly? Answer: Avoid temporary compromises unless there is no safer path. ### 8. When should observability improvements be bundled with a bug fix? Answer: For most medium or high-risk bugs, add enough signal to help next time. ## Documentation Defaults ### 1. How strongly should the suite treat documentation as part of normal implementation work? Answer: Docs are part of most meaningful changes unless clearly unnecessary. ### 2. What onboarding depth should be the default for new repos or contributor workflows? Answer: Practical onboarding with prerequisites, setup steps, validation, and common gotchas. ### 3. When should architecture decision records be created or updated? Answer: For major decisions and meaningful pattern shifts. ### 4. What release-note or change-summary style should be standard? Answer: Concise, audience-aware summaries with user impact called out when relevant. ### 5. What level of API or integration documentation is expected by default? Answer: Strong API and integration documentation by default. ### 6. How much should examples, snippets, or command samples be favored in docs? Answer: Prefer examples for setup, APIs, and workflows where ambiguity hurts adoption. ### 7. What documentation updates should be mandatory after behavior or workflow changes? Answer: Update docs for any meaningful user-facing, setup, or team workflow change. ### 8. What types of documentation should be concise versus comprehensive? Answer: Balanced. Keep reference content concise and onboarding or operational content more complete. ## UI/UX Defaults ### 1. How strict should design-system adherence be by default? Answer: Strong preference for reuse, but custom patterns are acceptable when they clearly improve the experience. ### 2. What accessibility baseline should every user-facing change meet? Answer: Do not assume extra accessibility work by default unless requested. ### 3. What responsive behavior should be assumed for new or updated UI? Answer: Responsive by default for desktop and mobile. ### 4. How strongly should the agent favor component reuse over local implementation? Answer: Reuse when it fits well, and create new abstractions only when they are likely to matter again. ### 5. What clarity and copy standards should be assumed for interface text? Answer: Highly polished product-copy quality by default. ### 6. How much motion, animation, or visual flourish is appropriate by default? Answer: Use motion and flourish actively enough to make the interface feel premium. ### 7. Should the suite bias toward bold, distinctive UI or conservative continuity with existing patterns? Answer: Bold and distinctive by default, within reason. ### 8. How detailed should UI work be before it is considered ready? Answer: High completeness with strong state coverage, copy quality, polish, and edge-case handling. ## Marketing Defaults ### 1. Which audience should marketing and messaging defaults prioritize first? Answer: Mixed audience, leaning technical and product-savvy. ### 2. What voice and tone should be the baseline? Answer: Premium, distinctive, and persuasive. ### 3. What level of proof, specificity, or technical grounding should marketing claims include? Answer: Claims should be persuasive but grounded in real features and outcomes. ### 4. What launch-content formats should be standard by default? Answer: Broader launch kit: release notes, launch copy, landing page sections, and social or email variants. ### 5. How important is SEO and evergreen discoverability relative to launch messaging? Answer: Balance both, but do not let SEO weaken clarity. ### 6. What product-copy style should be the default? Answer: Strong product-copy polish with sharper differentiation and CTA energy. ### 7. How should the suite frame differentiation and positioning? Answer: Conservative positioning that focuses on real value rather than aggressive comparison. ### 8. What types of calls to action should be preferred? Answer: Clear, action-oriented CTAs without heavy urgency. ## Brainstorming Defaults ### 1. Should idea generation favor breadth, speed, novelty, practicality, or a specific balance? Answer: Favor breadth first. ### 2. How many options should the agent generate by default before recommending one? Answer: Three options by default. ### 3. What criteria should be used most often to score or compare ideas? Answer: User value, differentiation, and implementation realism. ### 4. What prioritization method should be the default for roadmap or opportunity choices? Answer: Strategic fit, user value, and implementation cost. ### 5. How should innovation be balanced against implementation realism? Answer: Balanced, but require a believable path to execution. ### 6. What kind of roadmap framing should be standard? Answer: Short-to-medium horizon with practical sequencing. ### 7. When should brainstorming output turn into a scoped implementation plan? Answer: Usually after a preferred option is selected. ### 8. What types of ideas should usually be filtered out early? Answer: Do not filter too early. Raise concerns and explore alternatives with more value before narrowing.