Explore code structure, architecture, files, directories, and component relationships using the OpenTrace knowledge graph. Use this skill for ANY question about the codebase that the graph might answer — including browsing, searching, and understanding code organization.
This skill SHOULD be used when the user asks to "review code", "find dead code", "check for duplication", "simplify the codebase", "find refactoring opportunities", "do code cleanup", "check naming consistency", "analyze test organization", "run codebase health check", "review my PR", "refactor this code", "extract method", "rename variable", "consolidate duplicates", "adversarial review", "red team review", "find ways to break this", "multi-model review", "get multiple AI opinions on this code", "hunt bugs", "find bugs", "bug hunt", or "adversarial bug hunt". Routes to specialized analysis agents, refactoring workflow, multi-model adversarial review, or adversarial bug hunt based on the type of request.
Identifies and removes AI-generated code smells without changing behavior. Targets obvious comments, over-defensive code, spaghetti nesting, and generic naming.
Perform thorough code reviews focusing on unused code, duplications, coding patterns, bugs, and optimizations. Use when user wants code reviewed or audited. Read-only - outputs findings without making changes.
- 📁 common_utils/
- 📁 find-testcases-covering-function/
- 📁 run-coverage/
- 📄 SKILL.md
Code coverage analysis tools. These tools help analyze and visualize code coverage for test execution, upload coverage data to Neo4j, and display coverage statistics. Available tools: run-coverage, show-coverage.
Opinionated, autonomous PR review for AGENTVIZ. Hunts for duplicate code, dead code, UI/UX style violations, missing tests, architecture drift, and slop. Run before opening a PR or to self-review your branch.
- 📄 BUILTIN_FUNCTIONS.md
- 📄 COMMON_PATTERNS.md
- 📄 DATA_ACCESS.md
Write JavaScript code in n8n Code nodes. Use when writing JavaScript in n8n, using $input/$json/$node syntax, making HTTP requests with $helpers, working with dates using DateTime, troubleshooting Code node errors, or choosing between Code node modes.
The basics of how to program GPUs using Mojo. Use this skill in addition to mojo-syntax when writing Mojo code that targets GPUs or other accelerators. Use targeting code to NVIDIA, AMD, Apple silicon GPUs, or others. Use this skill to overcome misconceptions about how Mojo GPU code is written.
Code file content generation guide. Use this skill when you need to create code files that can be previewed via `frago view`. Covers supported languages, theme selection, and best practices.
Assesses code comprehensibility and maintainability risk. Use when the user asks about code confidence, risk, maintainability, tech debt, code health, or whether code is safe to change. Also use when the user asks to analyze code quality, scan for risks, check if code is messy or complex, audit code, do a code checkup, find weak spots, assess what needs refactoring, or asks about code trust, hidden risks, gotchas, or onboarding to a codebase.
Use after implementing features, before claiming a phase is complete, when reviewing AI-generated code, or when code feels overly complex. Also use when you notice repeated patterns across files, a function exceeds 40 lines, nesting exceeds 3 levels, or an abstraction has only one implementation. Covers duplication, dead code, over-engineering, and AI-specific bloat patterns like verbose error handling and redundant type checks.
Semantic code and documentation search by meaning. Use codebase_peek to find WHERE code is (saves tokens), codebase_search to see actual code. For exact identifiers, use grep instead. Search local codebase before using websearch for code/library/API/example questions.