skills/improve-codebase-architecture/SKILL.md
Explore a codebase to find opportunities for architectural improvement, focusing on making the codebase more testable by deepening shallow modules. Use when user wants to improve architecture, find refactoring opportunities, consolidate tightly-coupled modules, or make a codebase more AI-navigable.
npx skillsauth add petekp/claude-skills improve-codebase-architectureInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
3 of 9 scanners reported clean
Some scanners were skipped, did not run, or reported a non-clean status. Review each row below.
Explore a codebase like an AI would, surface architectural friction, discover opportunities for improving testability, and propose module-deepening refactors as GitHub issue RFCs.
A deep module (John Ousterhout, "A Philosophy of Software Design") has a small interface hiding a large implementation. Deep modules are more testable, more AI-navigable, and let you test at the boundary instead of inside.
Use the Agent tool with subagent_type=Explore to navigate the codebase naturally. Do NOT follow rigid heuristics — explore organically and note where you experience friction:
The friction you encounter IS the signal.
Present a numbered list of deepening opportunities. For each candidate, show:
Do NOT propose interfaces yet. Ask the user: "Which of these would you like to explore?"
Before spawning sub-agents, write a user-facing explanation of the problem space for the chosen candidate:
Show this to the user, then immediately proceed to Step 5. The user reads and thinks about the problem while the sub-agents work in parallel.
Spawn 3+ sub-agents in parallel using the Agent tool. Each must produce a radically different interface for the deepened module.
Prompt each sub-agent with a separate technical brief (file paths, coupling details, dependency category, what's being hidden). This brief is independent of the user-facing explanation in Step 4. Give each agent a different design constraint:
Each sub-agent outputs:
Present designs sequentially, then compare them in prose.
After comparing, give your own recommendation: which design you think is strongest and why. If elements from different designs would combine well, propose a hybrid. Be opinionated — the user wants a strong read, not just a menu.
Create a refactor RFC as a GitHub issue using gh issue create. Use the template in REFERENCE.md. Do NOT ask the user to review before creating — just create it and share the URL.
tools
Comprehensively manually test the Circuit plugin's user-facing surface in either Claude Code or Codex. Use this skill whenever the user asks to "manually test Circuit", "QA the Circuit plugin", "exercise the Circuit surface", "run the Circuit checklist", "smoke test Circuit", "find regressions in Circuit", "test the Claude Circuit plugin", "test the Codex Circuit plugin", or when preparing a Circuit release for marketplace publication. Argument is the host package to test — `claude` or `codex`. Produces a Markdown report with per-command pass/fail, exploratory findings ranked by severity, run-folder evidence links, and a concise terminal summary. Use even if the user does not say the word "test" — phrases like "go through every Circuit command" or "make sure Circuit still works end-to-end" should also trigger.
development
Turn the prompt supplied with this skill into a concise, auditable Codex Goal or explain why a Goal is not the right fit. Use when the user asks to draft, formulate, rewrite, tighten, or create a `/goal` from a plain-language task, especially for multi-step work that needs a durable objective, evidence-based completion, constraints, iteration policy, and a default adversarial review loop.
development
Give the human a fast, plain-English catch-up on what changed in the project: what the agents did, why, and what decisions need their input. Use this whenever the user asks to "catch me up", "what changed", "where are we", "recap", "brief me", "give me the rundown", "what did you do", "summarize the session", "fill me in", or otherwise signals they have been away and want to get back up to speed quickly. Built for someone steering several agent-driven projects at once who does not read the code closely but needs to grasp the core ideas, the choices made, and the open decisions well enough to steer. Trigger even if they do not use these exact words: any request to get oriented on recent progress should use this skill.
tools
Expert Unix and macOS systems engineer for shell scripting, system administration, command-line tools, launchd, Homebrew, networking, and low-level system tasks. Use when the user asks about Unix commands, shell scripts, macOS system configuration, process management, or troubleshooting system issues.