analyze_procurement
Analyzes a procurement request to evaluate its details and support energy infrastructure decisions.
Instructions
Run analysis on a procurement request
Input Schema
| Name | Required | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|---|
| id | Yes | Procurement request ID |
Analyzes a procurement request to evaluate its details and support energy infrastructure decisions.
Run analysis on a procurement request
| Name | Required | Description | Default |
|---|---|---|---|
| id | Yes | Procurement request ID |
Does the description disclose side effects, auth requirements, rate limits, or destructive behavior?
The description does not disclose any behavioral traits such as side effects, idempotency, or required permissions. With no annotations provided, the burden falls entirely on the description, which only gives a vague action without elaboration.
Agents need to know what a tool does to the world before calling it. Descriptions should go beyond structured annotations to explain consequences.
Is the description appropriately sized, front-loaded, and free of redundancy?
The description is extremely concise at one sentence, with no wasted words. It is front-loaded and to the point.
Shorter descriptions cost fewer tokens and are easier for agents to parse. Every sentence should earn its place.
Given the tool's complexity, does the description cover enough for an agent to succeed on first attempt?
Given the simplicity of the tool (one parameter, no output schema), a longer description could still add valuable context about what analysis is performed, output format, or constraints. The current description is insufficient for complete understanding.
Complex tools with many parameters or behaviors need more documentation. Simple tools need less. This dimension scales expectations accordingly.
Does the description clarify parameter syntax, constraints, interactions, or defaults beyond what the schema provides?
Schema coverage is 100% for the single parameter 'id', so the description adds no extra meaning beyond what the schema already provides. Baseline score of 3 is appropriate.
Input schemas describe structure but not intent. Descriptions should explain non-obvious parameter relationships and valid value ranges.
Does the description clearly state what the tool does and how it differs from similar tools?
The description states the tool 'Run analysis on a procurement request', which clearly indicates the verb (run analysis) and resource (procurement request). It is specific enough to convey purpose but does not differentiate from sibling tools like 'get_procurement_options'.
Agents choose between tools based on descriptions. A clear purpose with a specific verb and resource helps agents select the right tool.
Does the description explain when to use this tool, when not to, or what alternatives exist?
No guidance is provided on when to use this tool versus alternatives. There is no mention of prerequisites, context, or exclusions, leaving the agent to infer usage from the name alone.
Agents often have multiple tools that could apply. Explicit usage guidance like "use X instead of Y when Z" prevents misuse.
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