feat: add new OpenSpec skills for change management and onboarding

- Created `openspec-ff-change` skill for fast-forward artifact creation.
- Introduced `openspec-new-change` skill for structured change creation.
- Developed `openspec-onboard` skill for guided onboarding through OpenSpec workflow.
- Added `openspec-sync-specs` skill for syncing delta specs to main specs.
- Implemented `openspec-verify-change` skill for verifying implementation against change artifacts.
- Updated `.gitignore` to exclude OpenSpec generated files.
- Added `skills-lock.json` to manage skill dependencies.
This commit is contained in:
zguiyang
2026-03-13 13:18:03 +08:00
parent 21539772ef
commit bbb2f41591
144 changed files with 16027 additions and 1 deletions

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---
title: Early Length Check for Array Comparisons
impact: MEDIUM-HIGH
impactDescription: avoids expensive operations when lengths differ
tags: javascript, arrays, performance, optimization, comparison
---
## Early Length Check for Array Comparisons
When comparing arrays with expensive operations (sorting, deep equality, serialization), check lengths first. If lengths differ, the arrays cannot be equal.
In real-world applications, this optimization is especially valuable when the comparison runs in hot paths (event handlers, render loops).
**Incorrect (always runs expensive comparison):**
```typescript
function hasChanges(current: string[], original: string[]) {
// Always sorts and joins, even when lengths differ
return current.sort().join() !== original.sort().join()
}
```
Two O(n log n) sorts run even when `current.length` is 5 and `original.length` is 100. There is also overhead of joining the arrays and comparing the strings.
**Correct (O(1) length check first):**
```typescript
function hasChanges(current: string[], original: string[]) {
// Early return if lengths differ
if (current.length !== original.length) {
return true
}
// Only sort when lengths match
const currentSorted = current.toSorted()
const originalSorted = original.toSorted()
for (let i = 0; i < currentSorted.length; i++) {
if (currentSorted[i] !== originalSorted[i]) {
return true
}
}
return false
}
```
This new approach is more efficient because:
- It avoids the overhead of sorting and joining the arrays when lengths differ
- It avoids consuming memory for the joined strings (especially important for large arrays)
- It avoids mutating the original arrays
- It returns early when a difference is found