# Domain Docs How the engineering skills should consume this repo's domain documentation when exploring the codebase. ## Before exploring, read these - **`CONTEXT-MAP.md`** at the repo root — it points at one `CONTEXT.md` per context. Read each one relevant to the topic. - **`docs/adr/`** — read ADRs that touch the area you're about to work in. Also check `src//docs/adr/` for context-scoped decisions. If any of these files don't exist, **proceed silently**. Don't flag their absence; don't suggest creating them upfront. The `/domain-modeling` skill (reached via `/grill-with-docs` and `/improve-codebase-architecture`) creates them lazily when terms or decisions actually get resolved. ## File structure Multi-context layout (presence of `CONTEXT-MAP.md` at the root): ``` / ├── CONTEXT-MAP.md ├── docs/adr/ ← system-wide decisions └── src/ ├── / │ ├── CONTEXT.md │ └── docs/adr/ ← context-specific decisions └── / ├── CONTEXT.md └── docs/adr/ ``` ## Use the glossary's vocabulary When your output names a domain concept (in an issue title, a refactor proposal, a hypothesis, a test name), use the term as defined in the relevant `CONTEXT.md`. Don't drift to synonyms the glossary explicitly avoids. If the concept you need isn't in the glossary yet, that's a signal — either you're inventing language the project doesn't use (reconsider) or there's a real gap (note it for `/domain-modeling`). ## Flag ADR conflicts If your output contradicts an existing ADR, surface it explicitly rather than silently overriding: > _Contradicts ADR-0007 — but worth reopening because…_