| name | codebase-inspection |
| description | Inspect and analyze codebases using pygount for LOC counting, language breakdown, and code-vs-comment ratios. Use when asked to check lines of code, repo size, language composition, or codebase stats. |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| author | OPENAEON |
| license | MIT |
| metadata | {"openaeon":{"tags":["LOC","Code Analysis","pygount","Codebase","Metrics","Repository"],"related_skills":["github-repo-management"]}} |
| prerequisites | {"commands":["pygount"]} |
Codebase Inspection with pygount
Analyze repositories for lines of code, language breakdown, file counts, and code-vs-comment ratios using pygount.
When to Use
- User asks for LOC (lines of code) count
- User wants a language breakdown of a repo
- User asks about codebase size or composition
- User wants code-vs-comment ratios
- General "how big is this repo" questions
Prerequisites
pip install --break-system-packages pygount 2>/dev/null || pip install pygount
1. Basic Summary (Most Common)
Get a full language breakdown with file counts, code lines, and comment lines:
cd /path/to/repo
pygount --format=summary \
--folders-to-skip=".git,node_modules,venv,.venv,__pycache__,.cache,dist,build,.next,.tox,.eggs,*.egg-info" \
.
IMPORTANT: Always use --folders-to-skip to exclude dependency/build directories, otherwise pygount will crawl them and take a very long time or hang.
2. Common Folder Exclusions
Adjust based on the project type:
--folders-to-skip=".git,venv,.venv,__pycache__,.cache,dist,build,.tox,.eggs,.mypy_cache"
--folders-to-skip=".git,node_modules,dist,build,.next,.cache,.turbo,coverage"
--folders-to-skip=".git,node_modules,venv,.venv,__pycache__,.cache,dist,build,.next,.tox,vendor,third_party"
3. Filter by Specific Language
pygount --suffix=py --format=summary .
pygount --suffix=py,yaml,yml --format=summary .
4. Detailed File-by-File Output
pygount --folders-to-skip=".git,node_modules,venv" .
pygount --folders-to-skip=".git,node_modules,venv" . | sort -t$'\t' -k1 -nr | head -20
5. Output Formats
pygount --format=summary .
pygount --format=json .
pygount --format=summary . 2>/dev/null
6. Interpreting Results
The summary table columns:
- Language — detected programming language
- Files — number of files of that language
- Code — lines of actual code (executable/declarative)
- Comment — lines that are comments or documentation
- % — percentage of total
Special pseudo-languages:
__empty__ — empty files
__binary__ — binary files (images, compiled, etc.)
__generated__ — auto-generated files (detected heuristically)
__duplicate__ — files with identical content
__unknown__ — unrecognized file types
Pitfalls
- Always exclude .git, node_modules, venv — without
--folders-to-skip, pygount will crawl everything and may take minutes or hang on large dependency trees.
- Markdown shows 0 code lines — pygount classifies all Markdown content as comments, not code. This is expected behavior.
- JSON files show low code counts — pygount may count JSON lines conservatively. For accurate JSON line counts, use
wc -l directly.
- Large monorepos — for very large repos, consider using
--suffix to target specific languages rather than scanning everything.