Mini's Auto Mode Chains Dev Phases While Keeping Humans in Control
The sixth installment of the 'Building with mini' series introduces autonomous mode, a feature that chains multiple development phases — planning, execution, and completion — without requiring manual approval at each step. The command '/mini:auto' drives the loop automatically but stops at four defined boundaries: when selecting the next phase, when verifying user-facing output, when hitting an unresolvable blocker, or when a phase limit or project end is reached. If a phase fails to complete, the system retries up to three times before handing control back to the developer. In a practical demonstration, the author used auto mode to address a backlog item flagging '--help' support as broken, and the system flagged a conflict with a project rule before proceeding only after human approval. The episode frames autonomous mode as semi-automatic rather than fully unattended, deliberately preserving human judgment at critical decision points.
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