๐ŸŽฏ

negative-contrastive-framing

๐ŸŽฏSkill

from lyndonkl/claude

VibeIndex|
What it does

Clarifies complex concepts by defining boundaries through negative examples, anti-goals, near-misses, and failure patterns to prevent misunderstandings.

๐Ÿ“ฆ

Part of

lyndonkl/claude(72 items)

negative-contrastive-framing

Installation

Add MarketplaceAdd marketplace to Claude Code
/plugin marketplace add lyndonkl/claude
Install PluginInstall plugin from marketplace
/plugin install thinking-frameworks-skills
git cloneClone repository
git clone https://github.com/lyndonkl/claude.git
๐Ÿ“– Extracted from docs: lyndonkl/claude
9Installs
-
AddedFeb 4, 2026

Skill Details

SKILL.md

Use when clarifying fuzzy boundaries, defining quality criteria, teaching by counterexample, preventing common mistakes, setting design guardrails, disambiguating similar concepts, refining requirements through anti-patterns, creating clear decision criteria, or when user mentions near-miss examples, anti-goals, what not to do, negative examples, counterexamples, or boundary clarification.

Overview

# Negative Contrastive Framing

Table of Contents

  • [Purpose](#purpose)
  • [When to Use](#when-to-use)
  • [What Is It](#what-is-it)
  • [Workflow](#workflow)
  • [Common Patterns](#common-patterns)
  • [Guardrails](#guardrails)
  • [Quick Reference](#quick-reference)

Purpose

Define concepts, quality criteria, and boundaries by showing what they're NOTโ€”using anti-goals, near-miss examples, and failure patterns to create crisp decision criteria where positive definitions alone are ambiguous.

When to Use

Clarifying Fuzzy Boundaries:

  • Positive definition exists but edges are unclear
  • Multiple interpretations cause confusion
  • Team debates what "counts" as meeting criteria
  • Need to distinguish similar concepts

Teaching & Communication:

  • Explaining concepts to learners who need counterexamples
  • Training teams to recognize anti-patterns
  • Creating style guides with do's and don'ts
  • Onboarding with common mistake prevention

Setting Standards:

  • Defining code quality (show bad patterns)
  • Establishing design principles (show violations)
  • Creating evaluation rubrics (clarify failure modes)
  • Building decision criteria (identify disqualifiers)

Preventing Errors:

  • Near-miss incidents revealing risk patterns
  • Common mistakes that need explicit guards
  • Edge cases that almost pass but shouldn't
  • Subtle failures that look like successes

What Is It

Negative contrastive framing defines something by showing what it's NOT:

Types of Negative Examples:

  1. Anti-goals: Opposite of desired outcome ("not slow" โ†’ define fast)
  2. Near-misses: Examples that almost qualify but fail on key dimension
  3. Failure patterns: Common mistakes that violate criteria
  4. Boundary cases: Edge examples clarifying where line is drawn

Example:

Defining "good UX":

  • Positive: "Intuitive, efficient, delightful"
  • Negative contrast:

- โŒ Near-miss: Fast but confusing (speed without clarity)

- โŒ Anti-pattern: Dark patterns (manipulative design)

- โŒ Failure: Requires manual to understand basic tasks

Workflow

Copy this checklist and track your progress:

```

Negative Contrastive Framing Progress:

  • [ ] Step 1: Define positive concept
  • [ ] Step 2: Identify negative examples
  • [ ] Step 3: Analyze contrasts
  • [ ] Step 4: Validate quality
  • [ ] Step 5: Deliver framework

```

Step 1: Define positive concept

Start with initial positive definition, identify why it's ambiguous or fuzzy (multiple interpretations, edge cases unclear), and clarify purpose (teaching, decision-making, quality control). See [Common Patterns](#common-patterns) for typical applications.

Step 2: Identify negative examples

For simple cases with clear anti-patterns โ†’ Use [resources/template.md](resources/template.md) to structure anti-goals, near-misses, and failure patterns. For complex cases with subtle boundaries โ†’ Study [resources/methodology.md](resources/methodology.md) for techniques like contrast matrices and boundary mapping.

Step 3: Analyze contrasts

Create negative-contrastive-framing.md with: positive definition, 3-5 anti-goals, 5-10 near-miss examples with explanations, common failure patterns, clear decision criteria ("passes if..." / "fails if..."), and boundary cases. Ensure contrasts reveal the why behind criteria.

Step 4: Validate quality

Self-assess using [resources/evaluators/rubric_negative_contrastive_framing.json](resources/evaluators/rubric_negative_contrastive_framing.json). Check: negative examples span the boundary space, near-misses are genuinely close calls, contrasts clarify criteria better than positive definition alone, failure patterns are actionable guards. Minimum standard: Average score โ‰ฅ 3.5.

Step 5: Deliver framework

Present completed framework with positive definition sharpened by negatives, most instructive near-misses highlighted, decision criteria operationalized as checklist, common mistakes identified for prevention.

Common Patterns

By Domain

Engineering (Code Quality):

  • Positive: "Maintainable code"
  • Negative: God objects, tight coupling, unclear names, magic numbers, exception swallowing
  • Near-miss: Well-commented spaghetti code (documentation without structure)

Design (UX):

  • Positive: "Intuitive interface"
  • Negative: Hidden actions, inconsistent patterns, cryptic error messages
  • Near-miss: Beautiful but unusable (form over function)

Communication (Clear Writing):

  • Positive: "Clear documentation"
  • Negative: Jargon-heavy, assuming context, no examples, passive voice
  • Near-miss: Technically accurate but incomprehensible to target audience

Strategy (Market Positioning):

  • Positive: "Premium brand"
  • Negative: Overpriced without differentiation, luxury signaling without substance
  • Near-miss: High price without service quality to match

By Application

Teaching:

  • Show common mistakes students make
  • Provide near-miss solutions revealing misconceptions
  • Identify "looks right but is wrong" patterns

Decision Criteria:

  • Define disqualifiers (automatic rejection criteria)
  • Show edge cases that almost pass
  • Clarify ambiguous middle ground

Quality Control:

  • Identify anti-patterns to avoid
  • Show subtle defects that might pass inspection
  • Define clear pass/fail boundaries

Guardrails

Near-Miss Selection:

  • Near-misses must be genuinely close to positive examples
  • Should reveal specific dimension that fails (not globally bad)
  • Avoid trivial failuresโ€”focus on subtle distinctions

Contrast Quality:

  • Explain why each negative example fails
  • Show what dimension violates criteria
  • Make contrasts instructive, not just lists

Completeness:

  • Cover failure modes across key dimensions
  • Don't cherry-pickโ€”include hard-to-classify cases
  • Show spectrum from clear pass to clear fail

Actionability:

  • Translate insights into decision rules
  • Provide guards/checks to prevent failures
  • Make criteria operationally testable

Avoid:

  • Strawman negatives (unrealistically bad examples)
  • Negatives without explanation (show what's wrong and why)
  • Missing the "close call" zone (all examples clearly pass or fail)

Quick Reference

Resources:

  • resources/template.md - Structured format for anti-goals, near-misses, failure patterns
  • resources/methodology.md - Advanced techniques (contrast matrices, boundary mapping, failure taxonomies)
  • resources/evaluators/rubric_negative_contrastive_framing.json - Quality criteria

Output: negative-contrastive-framing.md with positive definition, anti-goals, near-misses with analysis, failure patterns, decision criteria

Success Criteria:

  • Negative examples span boundary space (not just extremes)
  • Near-misses are instructive close calls
  • Contrasts clarify ambiguous criteria
  • Failure patterns are actionable guards
  • Decision criteria operationalized
  • Score โ‰ฅ 3.5 on rubric

Quick Decisions:

  • Clear anti-patterns? โ†’ Template only
  • Subtle boundaries? โ†’ Use methodology for contrast matrices
  • Teaching application? โ†’ Emphasize near-misses revealing misconceptions
  • Quality control? โ†’ Focus on failure pattern taxonomy

Common Mistakes:

  1. Only showing extreme negatives (not instructive near-misses)
  2. Lists without analysis (not explaining why examples fail)
  3. Cherry-picking easy cases (avoiding hard boundary calls)
  4. Strawman negatives (unrealistically bad)
  5. No operationalization (criteria remain fuzzy despite contrasts)

Key Insight:

Negative examples are most valuable when they're almost positiveโ€”close calls that force articulation of subtle criteria invisible in positive definition alone.

More from this repository10

๐ŸŽฏ
grant-proposal-assistant๐ŸŽฏSkill

Guides researchers in crafting competitive NIH, NSF, and foundation grant proposals by providing strategic advice on hypothesis, significance, innovation, and approach sections.

๐ŸŽฏ
scientific-manuscript-review๐ŸŽฏSkill

Systematically reviews and enhances scientific manuscripts to improve clarity, structure, scientific rigor, and publication readiness across research articles and academic papers.

๐Ÿช
lyndonkl-claude๐ŸชMarketplace

Agents, skills and anything else to use with claude

๐ŸŽฏ
brainstorm-diverge-converge๐ŸŽฏSkill

Generates creative options through systematic divergent-convergent thinking, transforming open-ended challenges into structured, high-quality solutions.

๐ŸŽฏ
d3-visualization๐ŸŽฏSkill

Crafts custom, interactive data visualizations using D3.js, enabling complex chart designs with low-level control over data-driven DOM manipulation.

๐ŸŽฏ
adr-architecture๐ŸŽฏSkill

Generates comprehensive Architecture Decision Records (ADRs) to document and track significant technical decisions with context, rationale, and consequences.

๐ŸŽฏ
academic-letter-architect๐ŸŽฏSkill

Crafts compelling, evidence-based academic recommendation letters by transforming concrete experiences into powerful advocacy narratives for students and colleagues.

๐ŸŽฏ
writing mentor๐ŸŽฏSkill

Guides writers through structured feedback, editing suggestions, and writing improvement techniques across various genres and styles.

๐ŸŽฏ
socratic-teaching-scaffolds๐ŸŽฏSkill

Guides learners through strategic questioning, helping them discover insights and build understanding by progressively revealing knowledge through targeted, scaffolded interactions.

๐ŸŽฏ
visualization-choice-reporting๐ŸŽฏSkill

Matches data questions to optimal chart types, creating narrated dashboards that transform complex data into clear, actionable insights across business domains.