--- name: ubiquitous-language description: Extract a DDD-style ubiquitous language glossary from the current conversation, flagging ambiguities and proposing canonical terms. Saves to UBIQUITOUS_LANGUAGE.md. Use when user wants to define domain terms, build a glossary, harden terminology, create a ubiquitous language, or mentions "domain model" or "DDD". disable-model-invocation: true --- # Ubiquitous Language Extract and formalize domain terminology from the current conversation into a consistent glossary, saved to a local file. ## Process 1. **Scan the conversation** for domain-relevant nouns, verbs, and concepts 2. **Identify problems**: - Same word used for different concepts (ambiguity) - Different words used for the same concept (synonyms) - Vague or overloaded terms 3. **Propose a canonical glossary** with opinionated term choices 4. **Write to `UBIQUITOUS_LANGUAGE.md`** in the working directory using the format below 5. **Output a summary** inline in the conversation ## Output Format Write a `UBIQUITOUS_LANGUAGE.md` file with this structure: ```md # Ubiquitous Language ## Order lifecycle | Term | Definition | Aliases to avoid | | ----------- | ------------------------------------------------------- | --------------------- | | **Order** | A customer's request to purchase one or more items | Purchase, transaction | | **Invoice** | A request for payment sent to a customer after delivery | Bill, payment request | ## People | Term | Definition | Aliases to avoid | | ------------ | ------------------------------------------- | ---------------------- | | **Customer** | A person or organization that places orders | Client, buyer, account | | **User** | An authentication identity in the system | Login, account | ## Relationships - An **Invoice** belongs to exactly one **Customer** - An **Order** produces one or more **Invoices** ## Example dialogue > **Dev:** "When a **Customer** places an **Order**, do we create the **Invoice** immediately?" > **Domain expert:** "No — an **Invoice** is only generated once a **Fulfillment** is confirmed. A single **Order** can produce multiple **Invoices** if items ship in separate **Shipments**." > **Dev:** "So if a **Shipment** is cancelled before dispatch, no **Invoice** exists for it?" > **Domain expert:** "Exactly. The **Invoice** lifecycle is tied to the **Fulfillment**, not the **Order**." ## Flagged ambiguities - "account" was used to mean both **Customer** and **User** — these are distinct concepts: a **Customer** places orders, while a **User** is an authentication identity that may or may not represent a **Customer**. ``` ## Rules - **Be opinionated.** When multiple words exist for the same concept, pick the best one and list the others as aliases to avoid. - **Flag conflicts explicitly.** If a term is used ambiguously in the conversation, call it out in the "Flagged ambiguities" section with a clear recommendation. - **Only include terms relevant for domain experts.** Skip the names of modules or classes unless they have meaning in the domain language. - **Keep definitions tight.** One sentence max. Define what it IS, not what it does. - **Show relationships.** Use bold term names and express cardinality where obvious. - **Only include domain terms.** Skip generic programming concepts (array, function, endpoint) unless they have domain-specific meaning. - **Group terms into multiple tables** when natural clusters emerge (e.g. by subdomain, lifecycle, or actor). Each group gets its own heading and table. If all terms belong to a single cohesive domain, one table is fine — don't force groupings. - **Write an example dialogue.** A short conversation (3-5 exchanges) between a dev and a domain expert that demonstrates how the terms interact naturally. The dialogue should clarify boundaries between related concepts and show terms being used precisely. ## Example dialogue > **Dev:** "How do I test the **sync service** without Docker?" > **Domain expert:** "Provide the **filesystem layer** instead of the **Docker layer**. It implements the same **Sandbox service** interface but uses a local directory as the **sandbox**." > **Dev:** "So **sync-in** still creates a **bundle** and unpacks it?" > **Domain expert:** "Exactly. The **sync service** doesn't know which layer it's talking to. It calls `exec` and `copyIn` — the **filesystem layer** just runs those as local shell commands." ## Re-running When invoked again in the same conversation: 1. Read the existing `UBIQUITOUS_LANGUAGE.md` 2. Incorporate any new terms from subsequent discussion 3. Update definitions if understanding has evolved 4. Re-flag any new ambiguities 5. Rewrite the example dialogue to incorporate new terms