Capability
20 artifacts provide this capability.
Want a personalized recommendation?
Find the best match →via “task decomposition and hierarchical planning”
Framework for role-playing cooperative AI agents.
Unique: Integrates task decomposition as a core agent capability through a planning system that understands task dependencies and can coordinate execution of subtasks, rather than requiring agents to manually manage task breakdown.
vs others: More flexible than rigid workflow systems because agents can dynamically adjust plans based on execution results, whereas fixed workflows require manual updates when conditions change.
via “autonomous multi-step task execution with iterative human-in-the-loop control”
Self-hosted AI coding agent with privacy focus.
Unique: Implements human-in-the-loop agentic execution where each step is previewed and approved before execution, providing safety and control while maintaining task continuity across iterations. Unlike fully autonomous agents, this design allows users to redirect agent behavior mid-task without losing context, combining planning benefits with human oversight.
vs others: More controllable than fully autonomous agents (like AutoGPT) because it requires explicit approval for each step, while faster than manual coding because it handles planning and execution automatically; better suited for production environments where safety and auditability matter.
via “interactive-task-decomposition-and-planning”
Autonomous AI software engineer for full dev workflows.
Unique: Generates explicit task decomposition and execution plans with dependency analysis, allowing developers to review and approve the plan before execution begins, rather than executing tasks opaquely
vs others: Provides transparent task planning with dependency visualization, whereas most autonomous agents execute tasks without exposing their decomposition strategy
via “agentic task decomposition and multi-step execution”
Google's most capable model with 1M context and native thinking.
Unique: Extended thinking enables deep planning and exploration of task dependencies; model can reason about complex workflows and adapt plans based on intermediate results without explicit planning algorithms
vs others: More flexible than rigid workflow engines (which require predefined task graphs); better at handling novel task types and adapting to unexpected results than prompt-based agents
via “multi-step task decomposition and execution with error recovery”
Autonomous coding agent right in your IDE, capable of creating/editing files, running commands, using the browser, and more with your permission every step of the way.
via “planning workflow with task decomposition”
omo; the best agent harness - previously oh-my-opencode
Unique: Implements a two-phase workflow (plan then execute) with dedicated planning agents (Oracle, Librarian) that decompose tasks and validate plans before worker agent execution. This reduces execution errors compared to direct task execution.
vs others: Provides explicit task planning and decomposition before execution, whereas most agent frameworks execute tasks directly without planning, leading to more errors and suboptimal execution order.
via “plan-and-solve paradigm with task decomposition and execution”
📚 《从零开始构建智能体》——从零开始的智能体原理与实践教程
Unique: Explicitly separates planning phase from execution phase with structured prompting, providing code examples for plan parsing and subtask tracking, enabling agents to handle complex workflows more efficiently than pure reactive tool calling
vs others: More efficient than ReAct for well-structured tasks because it reduces redundant reasoning, but less flexible for truly dynamic problems where the next step cannot be predetermined; complements ReAct rather than replacing it
via “multi-step task decomposition and planning”
Scored 65.2% vs google's official 47.8%, and the existing top closed source model Junie CLI's 64.3%.Since there are a lot of reports of deliberate cheating on TerminalBench 2.0 lately (https://debugml.github.io/cheating-agents/), I would like to also clarify a few thing
Unique: Uses dynamic re-planning triggered by execution failures rather than static pre-planning, allowing the agent to adapt strategies mid-execution. Maintains a reasoning trace that captures why plans changed, enabling better learning from failures.
vs others: More adaptive than fixed-pipeline agents because it re-evaluates the plan after each step, making it more resilient to unexpected command outputs or environmental changes.
via “agentic reasoning with multi-step task decomposition”
runs anywhere. uses anything
Unique: Implements explicit state transitions between planning, execution, and reflection phases, where each phase produces structured artifacts that are fed back into the reasoning loop, enabling agents to learn from failures and adapt plans rather than just executing a static sequence
vs others: More transparent than black-box agent frameworks because reasoning steps are visible and auditable; more robust than single-shot approaches because agents can recover from failures through reflection
via “task decomposition and sequential execution planning”
JavaScript implementation of the Crew AI Framework
Unique: Uses declarative task definitions with explicit dependency graphs, allowing the framework to validate task structure and optimize execution order before agents begin work, rather than agents discovering dependencies dynamically
vs others: More structured than free-form agent planning because it enforces upfront task definition, reducing runtime uncertainty but requiring more initial specification
via “agent-based task decomposition and planning”
text-generation model by undefined. 47,03,591 downloads.
Unique: Trained on internlm/Agent-FLAN dataset (agent-specific instruction following with task decomposition patterns), enabling the model to natively understand and generate agent-compatible task plans without requiring separate planning modules or prompt engineering for each agent framework
vs others: Produces more structured and executable task plans than general-purpose instruction-following models due to Agent-FLAN specialization; fully open-source and deployable locally unlike proprietary agent planning APIs, with explicit task dependency awareness
via “task decomposition with execution history awareness”
The first "code-first" agent framework for seamlessly planning and executing data analytics tasks.
Unique: TaskWeaver's Planner generates decomposition plans as executable code rather than text descriptions, enabling the plan itself to be executed and refined iteratively. This code-first approach allows the Planner to leverage the CodeInterpreter for plan execution, creating a unified execution model.
vs others: More executable than LangChain's task decomposition because plans are generated as code and executed directly; reduces the gap between planning and execution, enabling tighter feedback loops and plan refinement.
via “agentic task decomposition with adaptive planning”
Opus 4.5 is not the normal AI agent experience that I have had thus far
Unique: Opus 4.5's reasoning capabilities enable mid-execution replanning where agents can observe intermediate results and dynamically adjust their task graph, rather than committing to a static plan at the start — this is architecturally different from rigid DAG-based workflow systems
vs others: More flexible than traditional workflow orchestration tools because it can adapt plans based on runtime observations, and more capable than previous-generation agents because reasoning is explicit and inspectable
via “agent composition and hierarchical task decomposition”
We’ve been working with automating coding agents in sandboxes as of late. It’s bewildering how poorly standardized and difficult to use each agent varies between each other.We open-sourced the Sandbox Agent SDK based on tools we built internally to solve 3 problems:1. Universal agent API: interact w
Unique: Provides first-class support for agent composition with automatic state passing, error handling, and result aggregation, enabling hierarchical agents without manual orchestration logic
vs others: More integrated than manual agent orchestration because it handles state passing, error handling, and result aggregation automatically, reducing boilerplate compared to building composition logic manually
via “agent-oriented task decomposition and execution”
Ex-GitHub CEO launches a new developer platform for AI agents
Unique: unknown — insufficient data on specific decomposition algorithm, whether it uses tree-of-thought, ReAct, or proprietary reasoning patterns
vs others: unknown — insufficient architectural details to compare against LangChain agents, AutoGPT, or other agent frameworks
via “task decomposition and subtask generation”
Show HN: Agent Swarm – Multi-agent self-learning teams (OSS)
Unique: Uses LLM reasoning for dynamic task decomposition rather than static workflow templates, enabling adaptation to task-specific requirements and emergent subtasks
vs others: More flexible than DAG-based systems (LangGraph) which require pre-defined workflows, but less predictable than explicit task hierarchies
via “multi-step task decomposition and agent-based automation”
AI сервис для разработчиков
Unique: Implements agent-based task automation integrated into VS Code extension with claimed multi-step execution and context maintenance, though specific execution scope, safety mechanisms, and error handling are entirely undocumented
vs others: Provides integrated agent automation within VS Code (unlike separate CLI tools or web-based agents), though execution capabilities, safety guarantees, and reliability compared to specialized automation frameworks are unverified
via “task decomposition with explicit agent role assignment”
Show HN: Multi-agent coding assistant with a sandboxed Rust execution engine
Unique: Uses explicit role-based agent assignment rather than generic agents, with role-specific prompts and constraints that guide generation toward domain-specific quality. Decomposition is integrated into the planning phase rather than being implicit in agent behavior.
vs others: More structured than generic multi-agent systems because role assignment creates clear boundaries and expectations, while being more flexible than hard-coded task pipelines because decomposition adapts to task complexity
via “agent task decomposition and execution planning”
Action library for AI Agent
Unique: Integrates LLM-based task decomposition directly into the agent execution loop, allowing agents to dynamically plan action sequences based on user intent and available actions, rather than relying on pre-defined workflows or rigid state machines
vs others: More flexible than hardcoded workflows because agents can adapt to new tasks and action combinations, but less predictable than explicit state machines and requires higher-quality LLM reasoning to avoid suboptimal plans
via “agent task decomposition and sequential execution planning”
Distributed multi-machine AI agent team platform
Unique: Uses LLM-based reasoning to dynamically decompose tasks at runtime rather than requiring pre-defined workflows, allowing agents to handle novel requests by reasoning about task structure
vs others: Enables dynamic task planning without hardcoded workflows, whereas traditional workflow engines require explicit DAG definition upfront
Building an AI tool with “Agent Process Execution With Task Decomposition And Step By Step Execution”?
Submit your artifact →curl unfragile.ai/agents.md | sh© 2026 Unfragile. The platform for software for agents.