| name | inherit-legacy-style |
| description | Legacy-project style inheritance skill. Use when the user types /inherit-legacy-style, or when onboarding an AI coding agent onto a hand-written legacy project and you need to prevent "style drift" (the model imposing its pretrained mainstream idioms onto the project). Language- and framework-agnostic — it aligns meta-architecture only, not syntax. Once run, it becomes a behavioral constraint on all subsequent coding tasks. Do NOT use for pure research or one-off questions unrelated to code-style alignment. |
| origin | community |
| allowed-tools | Read, Glob, Grep, Bash, Edit, Write, AskUserQuestion |
Inherit Legacy Style
Prevents AI code style drift in legacy projects by scanning the codebase for implicit conventions across 4 meta-architecture dimensions, resolving conflicts with the user one at a time, and crystallizing the consensus into an enforceable .ai-style-rules.md. Fully language- and framework-agnostic.
When to Activate
- User types
/inherit-legacy-style
- User mentions onboarding AI onto a hand-written legacy project
- User is worried about AI-generated code "drifting" from existing project conventions
- User wants to extract and codify their project's implicit coding rules
When to Use
Use this skill when you need to preserve legacy project style and prevent AI-generated style drift. See When to Activate above for trigger conditions.
Prerequisites
- Git (recommended; non-Git projects fall back to file timestamps for incremental mode)
- Read/Write access to the project root (generates
.ai-style-rules.md and optionally CLAUDE.md)
Workflow
Step 0 — Auto-Detect Mode
Silently check for .ai-style-rules.md at the project root:
| File exists? | Mode |
|---|
| No | Branch A — First-time Full-Scan |
| Yes | Branch B — Incremental Sniff |
Announce the mode in one line and proceed — never ask the user to pick.
Branch A — First-time Full-Scan
1. Measure scale, pick a scanning tier
git ls-files | grep -cE '\.(js|ts|jsx|tsx|vue|py|go|rs|java|kt|rb|php|cs|swift|c|cpp|h)$'
| Tier | Source files | Strategy |
|---|
| Small | ≲ 50 | Full close-read every source |
| Medium | 50–500 | Infra layer = full read; business layer = sample 2–3 per dimension |
| Large | ≳ 500 | Strict sampling + budget cap; --stat summary first, then targeted reads |
2. Scan along 4 dimensions
- File Anatomy — in-file declaration order (imports → types → main logic → helpers → export)
- State & Control Flow — naming conventions for async state, pagination, flags
- Infrastructure — where cross-cutting utils live (interceptors, formatters, middleware)
- Error Handling — try/catch vs global interceptor vs Result return; null-check habits
3. Apply signal-threshold noise reduction
Before interrupting the user, evaluate signal strength:
- Weak signal → auto-suppress: minority <5% AND count <10 → majority wins, minority goes to DONTs
- Strong signal → grill: near-even split, or semantic fork on a core dimension
- Small-project exception: sources ≲50, "3 vs 2" is NOT a majority → grill it
4. Resolve conflicts one at a time (Grilling Protocol)
For each strong-signal conflict, present exactly ONE question with 4 options:
Evidence: pathA uses style X, pathB uses style Y
WARNING: Risk: mixing both fractures the project style
Choose: 1 follow X 2 follow Y 3 this is evolution, update rules 4 I have a new rule
Suspend until the user answers, then proceed to the next conflict. Never stack questions.
5. Generate .ai-style-rules.md with three mandatory sections:
- [Golden Files] — real exemplar paths annotated with what they demonstrate
- [Naming & State-Control Rules] — concrete, checkable conventions
- [DONTs] — anti-patterns that must not propagate
6. Install the persistent hook
Ask the user for enforcement strength (use AskUserQuestion):
| Option | Mechanism |
|---|
| 1 Soft hook (recommended) | Write @.ai-style-rules.md reference into project CLAUDE.md |
| 2 Hard hook | Soft hook + PreToolUse[Write|Edit|MultiEdit] Hook in settings.json |
| 3 No hook | Keep the rules file; user references manually |
Branch B — Incremental Sniff
- Read existing
.ai-style-rules.md; if it has a commit fingerprint, git diff <last_hash> HEAD --stat to pinpoint delta
- Read recent Git changes (
git log -3 --stat → inspect suspect files on demand)
- For oversized diffs (>hundreds of files):
--stat summary only + sample the largest changes
- Compare new code against recorded rules → conflicts go through Grilling Protocol
- Append evolution log at the end of
.ai-style-rules.md (never overwrite old rules)
Per-Turn Enforcement
When .ai-style-rules.md is in context (loaded via CLAUDE.md), every code-writing task must open with a compliance declaration in the reasoning chain, naming the exemplar being followed and the DONTs being avoided.
How It Works
This skill auto-detects whether it's a first-time or incremental run via .ai-style-rules.md presence:
- First-time (Branch A) — Measures project scale, scans codebase across 4 meta-architecture dimensions (File Anatomy, State & Control Flow, Infrastructure, Error Handling), applies signal-threshold noise reduction to suppress weak conflicts, resolves strong-signal conflicts one-at-a-time with the user, generates
.ai-style-rules.md with Golden Files / Naming Rules / DONTs, and offers optional enforcement hooks.
- Incremental (Branch B) — Reads existing rules, checks recent Git diffs for new or conflicting patterns, runs the same one-at-a-time grilling protocol for any conflicts found, and appends evolution logs without overwriting existing rules.
- Per-Turn Enforcement — When hooked via
CLAUDE.md, every code-writing task opens with a compliance declaration naming the exemplar followed and the DONTs avoided.
Output Specification
.ai-style-rules.md at project root (with commit fingerprint + scale tier in header)
- Optionally
CLAUDE.md with @.ai-style-rules.md reference
- Evolution logs appended as
### [YYYY-MM-DD] Style Evolution Log entries
Anti-Patterns
- FAIL: Do NOT skip the scale measurement step — sampling a 30-file project "starves" it; full-scanning a 5,000-file repo blows up
- FAIL: Do NOT stack multiple conflict questions at once — grilling is strictly one-at-a-time
- FAIL: Do NOT overwrite old rules in incremental mode — always append evolution logs
- FAIL: Do NOT default to "hard hook" without asking — enforcement strength is the user's call
- FAIL: Do NOT judge syntax or tech-stack quality — this skill aligns meta-architecture only
- FAIL: Do NOT copy bugs from exemplar files — reuse structure, flag defects
Best Practices
- Announce the detected mode (first-time vs incremental) and scale tier in one line before scanning
- For large projects, read
--stat summaries first, then targeted Read on suspect files
- Let the signal threshold handle noise — a 843-vs-8 naming split should auto-resolve without user interruption
- When in doubt about signal strength, lean toward asking
- The CLAUDE.md soft hook (
@.ai-style-rules.md) is usually sufficient; hard hook only if the user wants mechanical enforcement
Related Skills
init — initialize a new CLAUDE.md with codebase documentation
code-review — review diffs for correctness and style issues
simplify — review code for reuse and simplification opportunities
Examples
-
First-time onboarding
- User: "Help me onboard AI to this older codebase without changing its style."
- Action: Run Branch A full-scan → measure scale → scan 4 dimensions → grill conflicts → generate
.ai-style-rules.md → offer hook strength (soft/hard/none).
-
Incremental update after team changes
- User: "We added a new module; keep existing style rules intact."
- Action: Run Branch B incremental sniff → compare Git deltas to recorded rules → grill any new conflicts → append evolution log without overwriting.
-
Enforcing DONTs via CLAUDE.md
- User: "Make sure all new code stays consistent with the project's rules."
- Action: Soft hook installed →
.ai-style-rules.md auto-loaded every session → every code-writing task opens with compliance declaration, reusing exemplar patterns and avoiding DONTs.