com um clique
simplify
// Use this skill automatically when you feel your code ready for human review. This means the code works and achieves a stated goal, verified by your own tests and/or, if you deem it necessary, human testing.
// Use this skill automatically when you feel your code ready for human review. This means the code works and achieves a stated goal, verified by your own tests and/or, if you deem it necessary, human testing.
| name | simplify |
| description | Use this skill automatically when you feel your code ready for human review. This means the code works and achieves a stated goal, verified by your own tests and/or, if you deem it necessary, human testing. |
Review changes in the current branch, or in the state the user specifies. Apply these criteria without changing behavior:
Names: Shorten verbose names while keeping them clear. Prefer human-readable concepts (baseline) over compound phrases that are more mechanical / academic (lastObservedDiskContent).
Combine related concepts: If two types, functions, or constants overlap significantly, merge them. The fewer distinct concepts a reader must hold in their head, the better. Example: two union types sharing 3 of 4 values → one type with shorter value names.
Derivability: If a value can be computed from other values already in scope, don't pass or store it separately. Removing derivable state often simplifies signatures, types, and control flow in one move. Example: an isDirty parameter that's always derived from computing editorContent !== baseline can be dropped.
Scope: Only touch code in the staged diff. Run existing tests after every change.