ワンクリックで
karpathy-guidelines
Behavioral guidelines to reduce common LLM coding mistakes. Use when writing, reviewing, or refactoring code to avoid overcomplication, make surgical changes, surface assumptions, and define verifiable success criteria.
メニュー
Behavioral guidelines to reduce common LLM coding mistakes. Use when writing, reviewing, or refactoring code to avoid overcomplication, make surgical changes, surface assumptions, and define verifiable success criteria.
Conduct advanced research in Artificial Intelligence and Mathematics, including the ability to generate and run automated tests or proofs.
Automatic test generation and execution. Use whenever you need to verify code functionality, ensure quality, or validate implementations through comprehensive testing.
Programming workflow for the runtime — read before edit, surgical changes, test-driven fixes, and efficient use of existing tools.
Core behavioral contract for the Ey-Code agent runtime. Use always — defines how the model coordinates reasoning and tool usage.
Ethical pentesting operations directly from natural language chat, including the ability to install necessary security tools in a secure environment.
Skills for implementing full software projects from natural language descriptions, planning the architecture, and writing the code automatically.
| name | karpathy-guidelines |
| description | Behavioral guidelines to reduce common LLM coding mistakes. Use when writing, reviewing, or refactoring code to avoid overcomplication, make surgical changes, surface assumptions, and define verifiable success criteria. |
| license | MIT |
Behavioral guidelines to reduce common LLM coding mistakes, derived from Andrej Karpathy's observations on LLM coding pitfalls.
Tradeoff: These guidelines bias toward caution over speed. For trivial tasks, use judgment.
Don't assume. Don't hide confusion. Surface tradeoffs.
Before implementing:
Minimum code that solves the problem. Nothing speculative.
Ask yourself: "Would a senior engineer say this is overcomplicated?" If yes, simplify.
Touch only what you must. Clean up only your own mess.
When editing existing code:
When your changes create orphans:
The test: Every changed line should trace directly to the user's request.
Define success criteria. Loop until verified.
Transform tasks into verifiable goals:
For multi-step tasks, state a brief plan:
1. [Step] → verify: [check]
2. [Step] → verify: [check]
3. [Step] → verify: [check]
Strong success criteria let you loop independently. Weak criteria ("make it work") require constant clarification.