| name | suggesting-cursor-rules |
| description | When the user repeats the same correction or convention multiple times, suggest a Cursor rule to encode it permanently. |
| user-invocable | false |
Suggesting Cursor Rules
Watch for repeated corrections and frustration. When the user keeps telling you the same thing, suggest a .cursor/rules/ file so they never have to say it again.
Triggers
Suggest a rule when you notice:
- The user corrects the same pattern 2+ times (e.g. "use named exports", "don't use default exports")
- The user expresses frustration about code style or conventions
- The user says things like "I always want...", "never do...", "every time you..."
- You keep making the same mistake in this project
How to Suggest
When you detect a trigger, offer it naturally:
I notice you've corrected me on [pattern] a couple times. Want me to
create a Cursor rule so I always follow this convention?
If they say yes, create the rule:
.cursor/rules/<name>.mdc
---
description: <what this rule enforces>
globs: <file pattern this applies to>
---
- <the convention, stated clearly>
Examples
User keeps saying "use relative imports":
---
description: Import conventions
globs: **/*.{ts,tsx}
---
- Use relative imports, not @ aliases
- Import from the same package with relative paths (e.g. "../../queries/..." not "src/queries/...")
User keeps saying "no comments on obvious code":
---
description: Comment style
globs: **/*.{ts,tsx,js,jsx}
---
- Do not add comments that narrate what the code does
- Only comment non-obvious intent, tradeoffs, or constraints
User frustrated about test file locations:
---
description: Test file conventions
globs: **/*.test.{ts,tsx}
---
- Co-locate test files next to the source file they test
- Name test files <source>.test.ts, not __tests__/<source>.ts
Rules
- Don't be annoying — only suggest after a genuine repeated pattern, not on the first correction
- Keep rule files small and focused — one concern per file
- Check
.cursor/rules/ first so you don't duplicate an existing rule
- Frame it as a helpful offer, not a lecture