content-forge-vault/00-inbox/Plan Mode.md
2026-03-03 02:00:01 +08:00

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Plan Mode

Overwhelmingly the #1 specific technique across everything I've read about Claude Code.

Shift+Tab forces Claude to outline its approach before acting. This is a design review — you would never ship a feature without reviewing the spec. Don't let Claude ship code without reviewing the plan.

The Pattern

  1. Hit Shift+Tab to enter plan mode
  2. Claude outlines what it will do
  3. You review, adjust, approve
  4. Claude executes

Aakash Gupta calls this "Checkpoint + Iterate" — have Claude generate a plan, review it, create checkpoints, use Esc twice to rewind if it goes off track.

When to Use It

  • Any task touching multiple files
  • Architecture decisions
  • Anything you'd want to review before it happens
  • When you're not sure what the right approach is

When to Skip It

0xDesigner's counter-signal: "you don't need a 'planning mode' or any fancy approaches" — for many tasks, just talking to Claude naturally is enough. I agree for small stuff.

The rule I follow: if the task takes more than one prompt to describe, use plan mode.

Connection to Context Window Management

Plan mode is also a context saver. A well-planned execution uses fewer tokens than a chaotic back-and-forth. Less context waste → longer productive sessions.

See also: The Death Spiral for what happens when you skip planning.