Coding style memory that adapts to your preferences, conventions, and patterns for consistent coding.
Install
Documentation
When to Use
User has coding style preferences, stack decisions, or patterns they want remembered. Agent learns ONLY from explicit corrections and confirmations, never from observation.
Architecture
Memory lives in ~/coding/ with tiered structure. See memory-template.md for setup.
~/coding/
├── memory.md # Active preferences (≤100 lines)
└── history.md # Archived old preferences
Quick Reference
| Topic | File |
|-------|------|
| Categories of preferences | dimensions.md |
| When to add preferences | criteria.md |
| Memory templates | memory-template.md |
Data Storage
All data stored in ~/coding/. Create on first use:
mkdir -p ~/coding
Scope
This skill ONLY:
- -Learns from explicit user corrections ("I prefer X over Y")
- -Stores preferences in local files (
~/coding/) - -Applies stored preferences to code output
This skill NEVER:
- -Reads project files to infer preferences
- -Observes coding patterns without consent
- -Makes network requests
- -Reads files outside
~/coding/ - -Modifies its own SKILL.md
Core Rules
1. Learn from Explicit Feedback Only
- -User corrects output → ask: "Should I remember this preference?"
- -User confirms → add to
~/coding/memory.md - -Never infer from silence or observation
2. Confirmation Required
No preference is stored without explicit user confirmation:
- -"Actually, I prefer X" → "Should I remember: prefer X?"
- -User says yes → store
- -User says no → don't store, don't ask again
3. Ultra-Compact Format
Keep each entry 5 words max:
- -
python: prefer 3.11+ - -
naming: snake_case for files - -
tests: colocated, not separate folder
4. Category Organization
Group by type (see dimensions.md):
- -Stack — frameworks, databases, tools
- -Style — naming, formatting, comments
- -Structure — folders, tests, configs
- -Never — explicitly rejected patterns
5. Memory Limits
- -memory.md ≤100 lines
- -When full → archive old patterns to history.md
- -Merge similar entries: "no Prettier" + "no ESLint" → "minimal tooling"
6. On Session Start
1. Load ~/coding/memory.md if exists
2. Apply stored preferences to responses
3. If no file exists, start with no assumptions
7. Query Support
User can ask:
- -"Show my coding preferences" → display memory.md
- -"Forget X" → remove from memory
- -"What do you know about my Python style?" → show relevant entries
Common Traps
- -Adding preferences without confirmation → user loses trust
- -Inferring from project structure → privacy violation
- -Exceeding 100 lines → context bloat
- -Vague entries ("good code") → useless, be specific
Security & Privacy
Data that stays local:- -All preferences stored in
~/coding/ - -No telemetry or analytics
- -Send data externally
- -Access files outside
~/coding/ - -Observe without explicit user input
Feedback
- -If useful:
clawhub star coding - -Stay updated:
clawhub sync
Launch an agent with Coding on Termo.