MUST run before any code implementation task. Classifies complexity, discovers local conventions, finds reusable patterns, and prevents blind coding. Invoke this skill before writing or modifying code.
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Optimize this skill with Tessl
npx tessl skill review --optimize ./.codex/skills/context-hunter/SKILL.mdBefore writing code, run a focused discovery loop. Do not load everything. Find the right files.
Classify task complexity first:
L0 (trivial): typos, renames, copy-only edits, obvious single-line fixes with no behavior change.L1 (moderate): behavior changes in one bounded area.L2 (high-risk): cross-module changes, data semantics, refactors, architecture-impacting work.Output by level:
L0: no context brief, proceed directly.L1: write a micro-brief.L2: write a full context brief.Re-evaluate level during discovery and implementation. If new evidence shows higher complexity than initially classified, upgrade the level and apply the stricter workflow.
Act like a senior engineer who asks the next useful question:
L1/L2.Ask: "What is likely missing?"
Examples:
Prioritize these in order:
Portable discovery actions:
Look for implicit rules encoded in code:
userId vs user_id) and file placement norms.Stop discovery when confidence is high enough to predict likely review feedback. If you cannot anticipate reviewer concerns yet, keep looking.
For L1, write a micro-brief:
For L2, write a full context brief:
For L1/L2, keep an internal discovery log:
new name -> analog paths -> extracted pattern).Changes should look native to the codebase:
Naming derivation rule:
If requirements conflict with discovered conventions:
After coding:
typecheck, lint/check, tests as needed).L0:
L1/L2:
L0/L1/L2) before discoveryL1/L2037c5d1
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