| name | refactor-crawler |
| description | Rewrite messy or AI-generated crawler code into clean, production-ready style that follows the zavod best practices. Use when the user asks to clean up, refactor, tidy, or "make production-ready" a crawler, or to bring code in line with best practices. |
| argument-hint | [crawler.py path] |
| allowed-tools | Read, Edit, Write, Glob, Grep, Bash |
Refactor crawler
Bring an existing crawler in line with current best practices. Typical input is a
first-draft or AI-generated crawler that works but is verbose, brittle, or non-idiomatic.
Target path: $ARGUMENTS
The rules live in zavod/docs/best_practices/ — this skill is only the procedure for
applying them. When a rule is unclear, read the doc; do not invent a convention.
Golden rule: every output change must be deliberate
Output may change when the refactor brings a methodological gain — e.g. moving to
h.apply_date (warnings + original_value), h.make_address composition, a
type.address lookup dropping placeholders, a tightened selector excluding junk. Name
each such change in your summary and tie it to the method that caused it. Never silently
alter emitted values. Leave name cleaning as it is: changing it means the sequenced,
multi-PR migration to the review system in zavod/docs/extract/names.md, out of scope
for a refactor pass.
Prime directive: strict interpretation
zavod/docs/best_practices/strict_interpretation.md — every source value within the
crawler's scope is handled, explicitly ignored, or raises a signal. A refactored crawler
must be more likely to fail loudly than the draft it replaces, never less: when you
remove a branch, replace it with a guard, not with silence.
The docs
best_practices/strict_interpretation.md — the prime directive: destructive parsing, audit_data, assertions, categorical coverage
best_practices/patterns.md — structure, naming, helpers, constants, logging, pagination, text hygiene
best_practices/xpath_and_html.md — typed HTML helpers, selector quality
best_practices/entity_id.md — make_id vs make_slug, which fields, key=
best_practices/datapatch_lookups.md — replacing inline conditionals with YAML lookups
best_practices/dates_meta.md — apply_date and dataset-level date formats
best_practices/addresses.md — make_address + copy_address
best_practices/http_operations.md — context.fetch_*, headers, Zyte
best_practices/caching.md — what not to cache
best_practices/priorities.md — which properties are worth the effort
best_practices/merge_checklist.md — the pre-merge review checklist
For pure type-annotation errors, defer to the /typechecker-fixes skill.
Workflow
- Read the crawler and its
.yml. Note the data source shape (HTML/CSV/XLSX/JSON/API)
and the existing lookups:, dates:, and http: sections.
- Capture a baseline: run
zavod crawl on the unmodified crawler and keep the
statement counts and a few sample entities to diff against later.
- Read the docs for the areas the crawler touches and apply them, most impactful
first: structure → selectors/parsing → IDs → dates/addresses → lookups → HTTP/caching →
logging/assertions → style nits.
- Verify (below).
- Summarise: which best-practice areas changed, every output change and its
methodological justification, and anything deliberately left alone.
Verification
From the repo root:
ruff check --fix --select I <path/to/crawler.py>
cd zavod && mypy --strict <path/to/crawler.py>
zavod crawl <path/to/dataset.yml>
Then confirm:
- New strict-interpretation guards are welcome — but when one fires on today's data, add
the missing lookup mapping rather than handing the warning off. The facility for many
warnings stays in the code;
issues.log is clean (transient network errors excepted).
- Diff the output against the baseline run (statement counts, spot-check entities) and
account for every difference — each must trace to a named methodological gain.
- The crawler still satisfies its
assertions: in the .yml.
- Walk the
merge_checklist.md items relevant to what you touched.