| name | ruby-refactor |
| description | Ruby refactoring guidelines from community best practices. This skill should be used when refactoring, reviewing, or restructuring Ruby code to improve design, readability, and maintainability. Triggers on tasks involving code smells, method extraction, conditional simplification, coupling reduction, design patterns, or Ruby idiom adoption. |
Community Ruby Refactoring Best Practices
Comprehensive refactoring guide for Ruby applications, maintained by the community. Contains 45 rules across 8 categories, prioritized by impact to guide automated refactoring and code generation.
When to Apply
Reference these guidelines when:
- Refactoring Ruby code to reduce complexity and improve design
- Extracting methods, classes, or value objects from large units
- Simplifying complex conditionals and deep nesting
- Reducing coupling between classes and modules
- Adopting idiomatic Ruby patterns and modern Ruby 3.x features
Rule Categories by Priority
| Priority | Category | Impact | Prefix |
|---|
| 1 | Structure & Decomposition | CRITICAL | struct- |
| 2 | Conditional Simplification | CRITICAL | cond- |
| 3 | Coupling & Dependencies | HIGH | couple- |
| 4 | Ruby Idioms | HIGH | idiom- |
| 5 | Data & Value Objects | MEDIUM-HIGH | data- |
| 6 | Design Patterns | MEDIUM | pattern- |
| 7 | Modern Ruby 3.x | MEDIUM | modern- |
| 8 | Naming & Readability | LOW-MEDIUM | name- |
Quick Reference
1. Structure & Decomposition (CRITICAL)
2. Conditional Simplification (CRITICAL)
3. Coupling & Dependencies (HIGH)
4. Ruby Idioms (HIGH)
5. Data & Value Objects (MEDIUM-HIGH)
6. Design Patterns (MEDIUM)
7. Modern Ruby 3.x (MEDIUM)
8. Naming & Readability (LOW-MEDIUM)
How to Use
Read individual reference files for detailed explanations and code examples:
Reference Files