sequential-thinking
Sequential Thinking
Enables structured problem-solving through iterative reasoning with revision and branching capabilities.
Core Capabilities
- Iterative reasoning: Break complex problems into sequential thought steps
- Dynamic scope: Adjust total thought count as understanding evolves
- Revision tracking: Reconsider and modify previous conclusions
- Branch exploration: Explore alternative reasoning paths from any point
- Maintained context: Keep track of reasoning chain throughout analysis
When to Use
Use mcp__reasoning__sequentialthinking when:
- Problem requires multiple interconnected reasoning steps
- Initial scope or approach is uncertain
- Need to filter through complexity to find core issues
- May need to backtrack or revise earlier conclusions
- Want to explore alternative solution paths
Don't use for: Simple queries, direct facts, or single-step tasks.
Basic Usage
The MCP tool mcp__reasoning__sequentialthinking accepts these parameters:
Required Parameters
thought(string): Current reasoning stepnextThoughtNeeded(boolean): Whether more reasoning is neededthoughtNumber(integer): Current step number (starts at 1)totalThoughts(integer): Estimated total steps needed
Optional Parameters
isRevision(boolean): Indicates this revises previous thinkingrevisesThought(integer): Which thought number is being reconsideredbranchFromThought(integer): Thought number to branch frombranchId(string): Identifier for this reasoning branch
Workflow Pattern
1. Start with initial thought (thoughtNumber: 1)
2. For each step:
- Express current reasoning in `thought`
- Estimate remaining work via `totalThoughts` (adjust dynamically)
- Set `nextThoughtNeeded: true` to continue
3. When reaching conclusion, set `nextThoughtNeeded: false`
Simple Example
// First thought
{
thought: "Problem involves optimizing database queries. Need to identify bottlenecks first.",
thoughtNumber: 1,
totalThoughts: 5,
nextThoughtNeeded: true
}
// Second thought
{
thought: "Analyzing query patterns reveals N+1 problem in user fetches.",
thoughtNumber: 2,
totalThoughts: 6, // Adjusted scope
nextThoughtNeeded: true
}
// ... continue until done
Advanced Features
For revision patterns, branching strategies, and complex workflows, see:
- Advanced Usage - Revision and branching patterns
- Examples - Real-world use cases
Tips
- Start with rough estimate for
totalThoughts, refine as you progress - Use revision when assumptions prove incorrect
- Branch when multiple approaches seem viable
- Express uncertainty explicitly in thoughts
- Adjust scope freely - accuracy matters less than progress visibility
More from smithery/ai
smithery-ai-cli
Find, connect, and use MCP tools and skills via the Smithery CLI. Use when the user searches for new tools or skills, wants to discover integrations, connect to an MCP, install a skill, or wants to interact with an external service (email, Slack, Discord, GitHub, Jira, Notion, databases, cloud APIs, monitoring, etc.).
13voice-clone
Clone a voice using qwen3-tts and generate speech from text
2skill-development
This skill should be used when the user wants to "create a skill", "add a skill to plugin", "write a new skill", "improve skill description", "organize skill content", or needs guidance on skill structure, progressive disclosure, or skill development best practices for Claude Code plugins.
2spec-workflow
Use when medium-to-large changes need explicit requirements, technical design, and task planning before implementation, especially for multi-module work, unclear acceptance criteria, or architecture-heavy requests.
2drawio
Guidelines and best practices for creating draw.io diagrams with proper formatting, font handling, and layout rules. Use when creating or editing .drawio files, generating architecture diagrams, or working with draw.io XML format. Ensures high-quality PNG output with correct Japanese text rendering and professional appearance.
1rhuss-excalidraw-generation
This skill should be used when the user asks to "create excalidraw
1